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New Member
Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2020 3:28 pm
by calvarybooks
- First Tig.jpeg (82.27 KiB) Viewed 886 times
After years of watching You tube and talking the wife into a TIG welder. First weekend of many fun and frustrating times to come.
Re: New Member
Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2020 3:44 pm
by TraditionalToolworks
Looks like a good start!
Welcome.
Re: New Member
Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2020 4:09 pm
by JayWal
Really good start!
Welcome to the forum
Re: New Member
Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2020 4:17 pm
by calvarybooks
It’s funny what I didn’t pay attention to in hours of video. The puddle is so mesmerizing. I should have filed the edges, used acetone instead of denatured, not place my parts on mill scale and that’s what I see in a couple of hours with a torch in my hand. I’m saving for 220 in my garage. And I also learned I should turn the gas on before welding. Things not shown in most videos, but I’m going to learn.
Re: New Member
Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2020 5:49 pm
by BillE.Dee
a real good start and welcome to the forum. What kind of equipment are you using ??
Re: New Member
Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2020 6:35 pm
by calvarybooks
Prime Weld 225ACDCP. It came with CK 17 flex and an upgraded pedal. The pedal feels like my Chevy.
3/16 purple tungsten, #5 standard cup @ 12 ccm, @ 109 amps.(I only have 110 in my garage), 1.5 sec pre flow and 7 sec post.
Ac frequency @ 120, Ac balance @ 30%. ER4043 3/16" filler from Harbor. Grinding my tungsten on a 120 flapper with out balling the point. I looked at the Miller Multimatic 220 but was veto'd from the wife. Any and all suggestions would be appreciated. I also use a small mig welder from Centry.(the red color trick me). I write g-code for large cnc machines, so this is just a Covid hobby for me.
Re: New Member
Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2020 8:03 pm
by LtBadd
calvarybooks wrote:It’s funny what I didn’t pay attention to in hours of video. I should have filed the edges, used acetone instead of denatured,
Welcome to the forum, sooner or later you have to jump in, no matter how many hours of video there is no substitute for getting under the hood, as you have discovered. It seems that the time spent watching videos has paid off, many have not done so well at their 1st go.
Don't worry about not having used acetone, I doubt if you had, you'd see any difference in the weld. Where it matters depends on the condition of the base metal to begin with.
calvarybooks wrote:And I also learned I should turn the gas on before welding
I've learned that, more then once over the years
Re: New Member
Posted: Mon Aug 10, 2020 12:08 am
by BugHunter
calvarybooks wrote:And I also learned I should turn the gas on before welding.
I bet I've done that a dozen or more times just when I turn the gas off as I finish one Weld and then decide I'm going to do something else and forget to turn it back on. Sad part is, my welder doesn't leak a bit and I could leave the gas on for a month and it wouldn't matter.
Welcome to The Forum.
Re: New Member
Posted: Mon Aug 10, 2020 1:26 am
by DavidR8
Welcome from one Primeweld owner to another!
Good work there. And on 110v!
A far sight better than anything I’ve managed so far.
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Re: New Member
Posted: Sat Sep 05, 2020 3:00 pm
by Chris G
Chris G here from Northern Illinois just wanted to say hello to everyone
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Re: New Member
Posted: Sun Sep 06, 2020 9:38 pm
by cj737
calvarybooks wrote:Prime Weld 225ACDCP. It came with CK 17 flex and an upgraded pedal. The pedal feels like my Chevy.
3/16 purple tungsten, #5 standard cup @ 12 ccm, @ 109 amps.(I only have 110 in my garage), 1.5 sec pre flow and 7 sec post.
Ac frequency @ 120, Ac balance @ 30%. ER4043 3/16" filler from Harbor. Grinding my tungsten on a 120 flapper with out balling the point. I looked at the Miller Multimatic 220 but was veto'd from the wife. Any and all suggestions would be appreciated. I also use a small mig welder from Centry.(the red color trick me). I write g-code for large cnc machines, so this is just a Covid hobby for me.
I hope you mean
3/32 or
1/16. 3/16” would be like welding with a Kindergarten pencil lead