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PostPosted: November 16, 2015, 7:03 pm 
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Since there isn't a "Lessons Learned - Welding" thread yet, thought I would insert a few comments here.

Things that improved my MIG welding:
- Got a good helmet with adjustable auto-darkening
- Added magnifying lens inside the helmet so I could get closer and see what was happening
- Mounted a little LED "flashlight" on the end of the torch to light up those dark recesses

and after much frustration with erratic feed of the wire:

- Switched the hose liner from a 0.030" wire-size to a 0.024" wire-size to match the wire I was using :roll:

I'm still not a good welder, but the above changes made a big difference in my results.

Feel free to move this post if a LL- Welding thread is started.

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My Car9 build: viewtopic.php?f=35&t=14613
"It's the construction of the car-the sheer lunacy and joy of making diverse parts come together and work as one-that counts."

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PostPosted: November 16, 2015, 8:15 pm 
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Joined: August 18, 2015, 12:41 pm
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Location: Seattle area (Woodinville)
If you were to build a second car, is there anything that you would do differently that you think that other builders would benefit to learn about. Conversely, is there anything that worked particularly well that you would recommend to others? Please confine this thread to Welding.

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PostPosted: November 16, 2015, 8:17 pm 
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Location: Seattle area (Woodinville)
Hang a plumb bob from the center of each end of the chassis when you do your finish welding and check it after each weld so that you can readily see if and how the chassis is distorting as you go.

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PostPosted: November 16, 2015, 8:21 pm 
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don't drop it when turning it over to finish weld it, ask me how i know.

it really isn't that critical as long as it goes straight and corners the same left to right.

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PostPosted: November 16, 2015, 9:11 pm 
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Joined: July 4, 2006, 5:40 pm
Posts: 1994
Location: Novato, CA
I started out as a novice, one semester of gas welding at my local CC. What I learned about MIG:

Visibility is everything.

If you wear glasses for nearsightedness, weld without your glasses.

Don't tack square tubes in the middle of a flat. Tack at the corners.

Beveling edges really improves the strength of a butt weld.

Set a quota of 50 welds that you'll grind away and try again. It's okay to do more than 50, but try to do at least that many.


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PostPosted: November 17, 2015, 12:01 am 
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Joined: March 30, 2011, 7:18 am
Posts: 1615
Location: central Arkansas
Earlier threads on MIG welding:

Grounds: viewtopic.php?f=15&t=12678&hilit=welding

Nozzles: viewtopic.php?f=15&t=12677&hilit=welding

Build table and welding: viewtopic.php?f=39&t=12199&hilit=welding

(because I was too lazy to type it all in again)


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PostPosted: November 17, 2015, 12:04 am 
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Posts: 91
Frayed pants equal hot legs...


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PostPosted: November 17, 2015, 12:17 am 
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Joined: October 24, 2008, 2:13 pm
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Location: Carlsbad, California, USA
1) Echoing Nick47 above: you can't weld well when you can't see well. Get cheater lenses for your helmet if need be. They're cheap and readily available at all welding supply shops. They make a big difference.

2) Consider using an auxiliary light to illuminate weld joints if they are not easily visible. Some clever people here have attached them to their welding helmets. You may want to do the same. You may need to adjust the settings on your auto darkening lens (if you have one) to do so.

3) If it is physically possible, grind down your tack welds and put a slot in them (like you're making a groove for a screwdriver) with your grinder that runs in the direction of the weld bead. If you can't do that, make sure to weld to the tack, not from it.

4) Good fit-up is huge. If there's a gap, it's almost certain something will move when the weld cools. If one side of a joint has a gap, and you can't fix it, weld it last. Additional tack welds along the gap will probably help minimize movement. Grind and slot them if at all possible.

5) Cleanliness is also critical. Your joint should be bright and shiny, free of oil, paint and rust (1/2" from the joint in all directions) and cleaned with acetone prior to welding. Use chemical-resistant gloves when you use the acetone. They're cheap and many home improvement and hardware stores sell them.

6) When welding joins of square or rectangular tubing that meet at an angle, weld the long sides of the join first.

7) Flat welds (horizontal) are the easiest to do well. Assuming you're an amateur welder, try to turn your work so you're not doing a vertical or overhead weld, if possible.

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Damn! That front slip angle is way too large and the Ackerman is just a muddle.

Build Log: viewtopic.php?f=35&t=5886


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PostPosted: November 17, 2015, 2:54 am 
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Joined: April 19, 2012, 9:43 pm
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Location: Colorado
Biggest tips:

1) If it smokes; you didn't clean enough. Always clean the joint, inside and out, until shiny bare metal is visible with no contaminates. Acetone evaporates quickly but is flammable. Isopropanol is a bit slower to dry, but doesn't ignite readily, making it safer if you aren't a particularly careful sort. The dirt on the inside that you ignore will degrade the weld just like if it were on the outside.

2) As mentioned, tight fit up will reduce warping and produce more consistent welds. It takes a lot more heat (and molten metal) to cross an air gap.

3) Remember to breathe. I'm not joking. I always find myself holding my breath and have to stop and remind myself to breathe. Biggest hint is when I realize I can't move the torch in a smooth straight line. Most people literally hold their breath when they start up the arc and don't breathe until they run out of air. You want to do the exact opposite: Take a deep breath, and slowly exhale as you start the arc. This feeds your muscles fresh oxygen and will make you much steadier and smoother in your movement. Make it a ritual that you follow every time and you'll weld better.


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PostPosted: November 17, 2015, 4:53 am 
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Location: England
As above with vision and the cheater lenses, you cant always get your helmet clad head near enough to a joint on a space frame to see properly.
Plan ahead and position the welder so to keep the welders lead is kept as straight as possible while welding .
Blow out the liner with an air line frequently and keep the shrouds clean, a can of anti spatter is a must for both the shroud and work-piece.
Nothing worse than weld spatter come chassis painting time to chop up all your abrasives and fingers.
Get comfy, you dont stand a hope in hell of producing a good even weld unless you get your elbow propped against something. Worth a minutes thought.
Other than technique which I wont go into a successful weld is only the correct amps and wire feed Vs speed of weld. Too slow and you burn through, too fast and you are cold laying mig wire on top of the work piece with no penetration.

Below is a rusty un prepped piece of 3mm scrap welded with .6 wire . A butt weld, internal and external all done on the same amps. If the wire feed Vs amps is correct you can get away with very poorly prepped work and still produce a presentable strong weld. I have Lloyds two gas and arc certs ( long expired) but am self taught mig , these are just my observations from personal experience.

Image

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PostPosted: November 17, 2015, 9:16 am 
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Get your welder settings dialed in on scrap before you strike an arc on your work piece.

Keep a log of weld settings for different material thicknesses.

Anti spatter paste is your best friend for keeping the shield cup clean.

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OOPS I did it again
http://www.locostusa.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=35&t=17496

Blood Sweat and Beers
http://www.locostusa.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=35&t=15216


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PostPosted: November 17, 2015, 3:04 pm 
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Joined: October 19, 2010, 11:57 am
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Location: Waterloo, WI
When welding in awkward locations, weld from the hardest position to the easiest. In other words, you have to cover a distance of A to B. If B is in a more awkward position and A is an easy position, weld from B to A. The reason I've found this to be handy (and was taught this by a very experience old dude) was that if you start with the easiest section and move to where it's hard, you may move out of ideal position and make a much worse weld. Set yourself up as well as you can to get the most difficult part first. Then finish like a champion. 8)

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PostPosted: November 20, 2015, 9:04 pm 
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Joined: July 17, 2015, 1:56 am
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Location: Morrisville, PA
seattletom wrote:
Since there isn't a "Lessons Learned - Welding" thread yet, thought I would insert a few comments here.

Things that improved my MIG welding:
- Got a good helmet with adjustable auto-darkening
- Added magnifying lens inside the helmet so I could get closer and see what was happening
- Mounted a little LED "flashlight" on the end of the torch to light up those dark recesses

and after much frustration with erratic feed of the wire:

- Switched the hose liner from a 0.030" wire-size to a 0.024" wire-size to match the wire I was using :roll:

I'm still not a good welder, but the above changes made a big difference in my results.

Feel free to move this post if a LL- Welding thread is started.


All of this plus clean welding surface and good CLOSE ground contact when welding tubing. Electricity travels over the skin of the metal. You may think "Hey i have a lot of metal surface area" but when the metal is dirty or hot and distance will reduce the current you are trying to apply.

I use wire braid (wire harness or cable shielding) with a small hand clamp or two if i can't get the ground clamp close enough.
Attachment:
price_braid_shield_tinned_copper_wire_zhejiang.jpg


Also ditch the stock ground clamp and use the solid brass copper one. http://www.mscdirect.com/product/details/62043534


You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.

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PostPosted: March 10, 2016, 2:10 pm 
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Joined: August 12, 2012, 6:38 pm
Posts: 1937
Location: worcester county, Massachsetts
For those of us who are using 135-140 amp MIG units, when working on thicker material - especially round tubing .125 wall and up - a red-hot preheat of the joint greatly improves the resulting weld.

round tubing seems to act as a greater heatsink than square tube, or flat stock for a given diameter. when I built the B-3 Mod 2 control arms, I preheated every joint red hot, and the welds flowed like butter.

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The B-3 build log: http://www.locostusa.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=36&t=13941 unfortunately, all the pictures were lost in the massive server crash

The beginnings of the Jag Special,
https://www.locostusa.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=36&t=19012
Again, all pictures were lost.


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PostPosted: December 25, 2018, 6:58 am 
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Joined: May 12, 2015, 2:28 pm
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A couple of things that I have learned from school and experience:

1. Prep, prep, prep. You can mig through mill scale and you can mig through some rust, but a little bit of work on the metal will help you immensely. Clean metal and tight joints will help you stick metal to metal like a champ. Tig is even more finicky, get shiny metal. Get all the way through your mill scale

2. Proper set up is key. Have some scrap, run a few passes, once you get something looking like you like it, keep going. Do a few that look good and then start working on your piece. It helps to avoid a beginners luck pass aka that great looking pass that is a fluke.

3. Avoid heat. Heat is a big part of welding, some say the biggest, but it should be avoided as much as possible. Bounce around on the piece and let it cool down as much as possible. Warm is good to weld on, red hot introduces heat deformation and warping. Warping is the enemy of great fitment, and great fitment is key to good welds. You can make a weld cooler by welding a quick disconnect onto some small pipe, drilling holes on one side, bending it so those holes are on the inside of the j, and welding the end up. Hook it up to an air hose and you have a quick metal cooler.

4. Most importantly, tack the hell out of your work piece, it doesn't matter if it is a bunch of flat metal for a turbo shield or a tubular frame, tack everything multiple times and then tack it some more. The more that the piece can hold itself together, the better it will avoid warping and all the time you spent on your fit up will hold itself together.

Bonus tip: good bracing, if you are comfortable, you make good welds. Put your hands in a comfortable spot and stay that way. If you have to, work from discomfort to comfort. If you are doing tig, make your hand comfortable at the end of your weld and then extend yourself to the beginning of the weld. Small passes are your friend in tig, multiple inch passes are better than a foot of weld at a time.

Do all of this helps you to get the most out of your skills.


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