triumphs
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: The Would-Be Do-It-Yourself Welder

To: "Hansen, Hans C, III (Red), BMSLS" <rhansen@att.com>, triumphs@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: The Would-Be Do-It-Yourself Welder
From: Erik Quackenbush <erik@midwestfilter.com>
Date: Thu, 22 Mar 2001 09:45:12 -0600
It is easy to teach yourself to use a MIG welder. A MIG welder has a 
trigger fed gun which automatically feeds welding wire onto the parts you 
are welding together. It uses a tank of 'inert' gas (argon, CO2 mix 
usually) to shield the fresh weld from being contaminated by the atmosphere 
until it solidifies. You can probably put together a MIG welding outfit for 
about $500-$600. Figure $400 for a 120V welder, $100 for a tank of gas, and 
$50 for a basic helmet and gloves. You can buy a welder that does not 
require shielding gas when used with 'flux core' wire but it is much more 
difficult to do quality work without shielding gas. Gas refills are about 
$20-$25 around here for a small tank. I've had my welder a couple of years 
now and I'm just about ready to get a second refill. If you can spend a 
little more I highly recommend an electronic welding helmet (I've seen them 
for $100-$150) which goes dark a fraction of a second after it detects a 
welding arc. Without one you'll be flipping your visor up and down 
constantly until you get the hang of it.

Did the gas welding outfit you saw include tanks? If not you need to figure 
$100 each for the oxygen and acetylene tanks. If so you'll still need  to 
have them filled (new tanks from Great Lakes AirGas come filled) You'll 
need goggles or a helmet, gloves, and gas welding rod (not flux coated). 
One advantage an oxy/acetylene rig has over a MIG welder is that you can 
use it as a cutting torch although a plasma cutter is more precise and will 
also let you cut stainless and aluminum.

Before you buy anything get a copy of "Welder's Handbook: A complete guide 
to MIG, TIG, Arc, & Oxyacetylene welding" by Richard Finch. It is published 
by H.P.Books and is available from Amazon, Motorbooks, and Eastwood. I've 
also seen it at my local Sears Hardware store. If you have a local Triumph 
club I would definitely ask around to see if anyone already has welding 
equipment they would let you use.

-Erik
--
Erik Quackenbush, V.P. Operations, Midwest Filter Corporation
1-847-680-0566 fax: 1-847-680-0832 http://www.midwestfilter.com

///
///  triumphs@autox.team.net mailing list
///


<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>