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self teaching welding question

Started by deanj309, June 10, 2012, 02:55:53 PM

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deanj309

Well I'm weldinding in y floor pan(well trying!) My question is, after I fill the spot weld hole and gring it down I'm finding small pin holes in my weld should istill weld up the tiny pine holes I'm self teaching so I don't know if this is norm thx!

Silver R/T

you can weld them up and grind it down. If they're not all the way through it's not critical, you can use some spot putty and epoxy primer over that.
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Charger RT

does your welder use shielding gas? holes in your weld is usually lack of gas.
Tim

deanj309

Yea it all bottled up,is it suppose to be a clean burn? does it mean anything when it keeps poping.what does a good spot weld look like ect

69rtse4spd

Could be to little gas flow, whats the book on the welder suggest. I assume your steel is clean, what dose the book also suggest for the heat setting, could be to cold. I am buy no means a professional welder, self taught myself, there are more qualified people on here then me. :Twocents:.   

c00nhunterjoe

Popping is a very vague term regarding welding. Could be to high a gas flow, too slow a wire speed, heat too low..... its really hard to say.

What wire thickness are you using and what gas mixture?

deanj309

er
Well I can hardly see to write this,but I have a hobart 140 and its set at 2 for heat and speed of 30 and my gas is runnin at around 22 with .024 wired....but iam new to it ...so new I now have to wear patches over both eyes with gause and medicine because I raised the welding mask and welded a few.now I will be taking a few days off work and a short pause on the floor pan thx for the replys. will be continued after I can see!!!!lesson well learned!

AirborneSilva

Quote from: deanj309 on June 11, 2012, 09:57:50 PM
er
Well I can hardly see to write this,but I have a hobart 140 and its set at 2 for heat and speed of 30 and my gas is runnin at around 22 with .024 wired....but iam new to it ...so new I now have to wear patches over both eyes with gause and medicine because I raised the welding mask and welded a few.now I will be taking a few days off work and a short pause on the floor pan thx for the replys. will be continued after I can see!!!!lesson well learned!

WOW  :o  First thing you need to do is get a GOOD self dimming welding helmet and NEVER look at the arc, but I guess you know that now...  I have a hobart 125 handler w/gas kit and it sounds like you are close (I should say I'm not an expert).  Are you finding you're burning through?  I would think that on sheet metal like that it should be on 1 w/wire speed around 4 or maybe slightly higher but without being there or seeing the welds it's just a guess....   :shruggy:

garych11

put potato slices over your eyes. works well i have done it to!!!

Dino

Be careful there, you'll not only ruin your eyes but you can seriously burn your skin. 

Seems to me that the wire speed is a bit too fast so the wire keeps popping.  Pinholes can be welded shut but you need to focus on not getting those to begin with.  Not to say a pinhole won't occur at all but on a spot weld there shouldn't be any.  Have the wire go fairly slow, start in the middle of the hole and make a small circle to get a nice, wide and flat weld.  Practice on scrap, not on your car.  How big did you make the holes for the spot welds?
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

deanj309

My eyes are slowly healing and still dialated.....but I used 3/8 hole for spot welding in floor pan

Dino

Quote from: deanj309 on June 13, 2012, 10:41:38 PM
My eyes are slowly healing and still dialated.....but I used 3/8 hole for spot welding in floor pan

3/8 is fine.  Did you get drops for your eyes?  It'll help speed up the healing process and will feel good.
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

bill440rt

Get some scrap steel to practice on before trying to weld in a floor pan on your car.  :yesnod:
You should hear a nice even "sizzle" as you are welding. You'll know you have good penetration on the scrap steel when you have an even bead on the backside of the metal as well as the top side.
As you are welding, slowly turn the wire speed up or down until the "sizzle" evens out. You'll know you have proper wire speed when the weld sounds right. You can then play with the heat setting so there is no burn thru & no "bird sh*t" welds. You may have to adjust the speed setting again. I like to mark the setings on the welder with tape so next time it will be at least very close of a starting point.
If you are plug welding, I like to start in the middle of the hole & spriral outwards (work in-to-out), rather than out-to-in.

Too many variables between welders, material, etc to give you a straight heat setting & wire speed answer, but hope those tips help you some.
AND ALWAYS WEAR A WELDING HELMET!!!!!!    :buff:   :coolgleamA:
Good luck!  :2thumbs:
"Strive for perfection in everything. Take the best that exists and make it better. If it doesn't exist, create it. Accept nothing nearly right or good enough." Sir Henry Rolls Royce

AirborneSilva

I was told the "sizzle" should sound like bacon frying - made sense to me  :icon_smile_big:

HOTROD

sheet metal poops after you welded it ???
turn the heat up.
screw the  sheet metal down to hold it in place temporally !
What the Hell-Dumass !

Wicked72

make sure the surface is nice and clean. any paint or oil will screw up the welds. making pin holes. also the wire speed and heat need to be played with to get that frying bacon sound which will make perfect welds. another tip is the distance your hold the welding tip away will effect it as well i want to say i hold it about an 1/8 of inch or closer. just dont hold it to close or youll weld the tip up and the wire wont feed. the best tip of all make sure you can see what your doing!!!! get some lights shining on what your welding it will have a massive diff and an auto dim helmet!!! gl  :cheers:
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AirborneSilva

Quote from: Wicked72 on June 15, 2012, 05:10:57 AM
make sure the surface is nice and clean. any paint or oil will screw up the welds. making pin holes. also the wire speed and heat need to be played with to get that frying bacon sound which will make perfect welds. another tip is the distance your hold the welding tip away will effect it as well i want to say i hold it about an 1/8 of inch or closer. just dont hold it to close or youll weld the tip up and the wire wont feed. the best tip of all make sure you can see what your doing!!!! get some lights shining on what your welding it will have a massive diff and an auto dim helmet!!! gl  :cheers:

I also wear reading glass' when I weld, getting old  :icon_smile_big: :yesnod:

lexxman

Yes  NEVER weld with out a helmet and a long sleeve short. If your machine sound good try moving in a circular motion. Sometimes doing plug welds you'll get hold if you stay in one place. Arc flush can hurt,remeber you only have one pair of eyes.

rattlehead_74

You will also want to make sure your ground is as close as possible to your work area..The smaller welders like the ground to be real close to get the best result.You might try grinding paint off in the center of your work area,and tack welding a 3/8 or bigger bolt  to that area and hook your ground clamp to the bolt.Also,use good ventilation,,but dont let air move across where your welding,,That will def cause pinholes.

deanj309

Hey everyone, well my eyes are healed.I havnt finished the floor yet,ran out of gas.but I hav a new question. I have to put in a speaker shelf and rear window channel can these be body panel glued in :icon_smile_big: thx!_veryone

Cooter

Personally, I would "Panel Glue" anything that had to do something other than just sit there and look good like a Quarter panel...

A Window channel really should be welded, as should be the speaker shelf. They have to support weight, not just sit there.
" I have spent thousands of dollars and countless hours researching what works and what doesn't and I'm willing to share"

73charger440

And I learned  in the winter not wear a insulated flannel ,thought everything was ok till I seen light out the side of my helment then realized my arm was on fire.I always heard the bacon sizzling thing also ,also make sure that ur machine is set up with the same wire gauge as what ur using.and useing a cheap wire makes a differnance.also make sure the they gave the correct gas I had the gas place give me streight argon instead of C02 argon mix.and it welded like shit.

cdr

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deanj309

I  picked up new argon gas but I didn't specify what gas,I just said I needed argon.how do I tell if I have the right one and can I use the one I have thx!

73charger440

Ill see what my bottle looks like.stright argon is  only good for welding alumuinm.