Stick Welding Tips, Certification tests, machines, projects
I use a file to get the slag of the end of the rod for restarts.
Using your gloved thumb rips the leather and before you know it you use your skin to get the slag of.
My gloves last a lot longer since i started using the file.
Using your gloved thumb rips the leather and before you know it you use your skin to get the slag of.
My gloves last a lot longer since i started using the file.
Using a file is fine for the weekend wars. If you're doing it on the job you haven't got time to screw around with files and besides your gloves get destroyed by grinder action, sharp burrs and burned way before flux flicking makes a difference.
Flat out like a lizard drinkin'
If you're cutting up your gloves with flux you're doing it wrong. It's more of a squeeze than a scrape. You don't need a full end clean, you just need to expose metal in one spot so you can strike an arc.
Flat out like a lizard drinkin'
I use a file and a wire brush. Rods cheap. I don’t relite on anything important everything else gets tapped on my file or a nearby hard ungrounded surface. Just a matter of habit.
I have more questions than answers
Josh
Josh
And its a GOOD habit too. Anything x-rayed deserves fresh rods for every restart. A few rods are far cheaper than grinding or cutting out a failed weld.Poland308 wrote:Rods cheap. I don’t relite on anything important everything else gets tapped on my file or a nearby hard ungrounded surface. Just a matter of habit.
After jackin around a bit I finally started getting nice looking beads and "peelers."..with the 7018
They are Lincoln 3/32. It says to use 65-100 amps, but I couldn't get a stable arc on 1/4 plate steel unless I turned up to 120 amps. 100 amps seemed week. 110 was a little better, but 120 seemed to be the sweet spot.
Is it common to have to turn the amps up out of spec to get a stable arc? The pics I attached are 120 amp beads on 1/4 steel.
My machine is a Sungold arc200
They are Lincoln 3/32. It says to use 65-100 amps, but I couldn't get a stable arc on 1/4 plate steel unless I turned up to 120 amps. 100 amps seemed week. 110 was a little better, but 120 seemed to be the sweet spot.
Is it common to have to turn the amps up out of spec to get a stable arc? The pics I attached are 120 amp beads on 1/4 steel.
My machine is a Sungold arc200
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BillE.Dee
- BillE.Dee
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Weldmonger
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Posts:
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Joined:Mon Nov 27, 2017 8:53 pm
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Location:Pennsylvania (Northeast corner)
I seem to be likin that weld Dan. I think that the machines of today are only in the ball park of getting the settings. I really don't know if they are all "tuned" to be the same when set at a particular number on the dial. I think it is all what works for YOU.
Stay safe, warm and healthy.
Stay safe, warm and healthy.
Thx BillE... Good point about the machine amp dial too. My little inverter didn't run 6010 or 6011 very well on the recommend amp range, per the dial setting. Perhaps if I kick the amps up on the dial I'll have better luck... Going to try it..
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