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Re: Welding ... kinda long but I got carried away

To: Chris Hill <Pirouette@uisreno.com>
Subject: Re: Welding ... kinda long but I got carried away
From: Larry Paulick <larry.p@erols.com>
Date: Wed, 02 Jan 2002 21:32:11 -0500
Chris, another great tip.  Thanks.  Steve, I hope you put a welding section on
the United Site.  This is good and very useful stuff.

Larry

Chris Hill wrote:

> Tom,
>     A little add-on since, as noted, you're never going to get away from the
> occasional blowthrough.
>
>         Tip #1 -- Blowing a hole is like falling skiing.  The longer you wait
> to accept the obvious, the worse the consequences.  When you see the sag
> start, the color change, even the sound change....stop!  You'll still likely
> have a hole by the time you get your finger off the trigger, but it'll be alot
> more manageable.
>
>         Tip #2 -- Fixing a manageable hole is the easiest thing in MIG
> welding, if you set it up right.  Try this, it's very fast because it requires
> virtually no waiting.  Tim noted that pulling away from the surface slightly
> will create a little ball.  This can be very useful, though you want the ball
> on the surface rather than on the wire end.  Turn your welder down one (or two
> if necessary) heat settings.  Put the gun down on the surface, 30-45^ to
> vertical with enough wire out that it touches the surface about a 16th to a
> very short 3/32nd from the edge (more if very thin).  Tap the trigger (about
> the duration of "1" in counting a second as "one-thousand", or a hair less).
> You now should have a little glob next to the edge.  Do this all the way
> around the hole (NOT in sequence -- dot around) until there are no gaps.  By
> the time you're done, it will look like a mess, ugly and there may be a fair
> amount of that brown oxidation byproduct around.  Ignore it if you want since
> it's about to get consumed and the penetration of the little globs is slight
> at best, don't resist wire brushes too well.  Go back to normal heat.  Start a
> bead with the gun straight down at some point in the ring you've made.  Follow
> the ring around at a hand speed that just melts the ring onto (not into) the
> surface metal.  When you close the ring, immediately increase your hand speed
> and spiral around in a circle closing inwards.  Stop as SOON as you see the
> middle of the hole disappear.
>     This is functionally the same as Tim's method, heat is absorbed by the
> melting blobs, which then provide support on cooling as you move further, but
> it's very fast.  I don't even bother putting the visor down for the blobs
> part, just look away each time since the  gun is braced on the metal, and I
> usually stop briefly after completing the blob ring to let things cool, just
> to be antiwarp safe.  But after a little practice (very little, this really is
> a fast learning curve), if you don't bother to wait, you can do a hole start
> to finish in 20-30 sec. !!  And it will look good and be clean solid and
> almost flat metal.
>
>
>                        Chris Hill

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