DieselSlug
Well-Known Member
Yea, no power tools at my local yard. Tin snips, or a hack saw is all you got. It sucks.Maybe the best practice metal would be from an auto salvage. Take along a battery powered right angle grinder, a few cut off disks and see if the salvage yard would allow You to saw off a few pieces, or a dozen.
Unless they have a no spark policy.
I definitely did see he was struggling, but I chalked it up to he acting as a "novice" would. I definitely have watched a ton of videos some tailored to the trainer being a novice, and others coming from professional backgrounds using their video as a commercial. Its definitely going to be painstaking with flux (I am finding that out quick). Called on the FP130 yesterday and still 20 plus units ahead of me. So ridiculous, they have had the unit since November!!Ok, I started watching that video. At the 15-16 minute point where he is showing to just tack a bunch of times, then when he tried welding, he blew through it. Then turned his heat down some and didn’t turn down his wire speed at first. Then he turned down the wire when he couldn’t weld at all with it. And was still blowing through it. He was running too hot still, and still had way too much wire speed.
There is thousands of guys out there who turn the heat down and weld beads all day long on metal that thick with no problems.
True, you wouldn’t run an non stop bead that is 12” long without using a heat sink and not warp it. But absolutely should weld 2” stitches and have no warp.
See how his heat was so high it blued the metal way bigger than his weld area?
Way too much heat.
See how after he adjusted his speed he still ended up with wire jammed clear through the other side when he turned it over? Crazy too much wire speed.
When I owned the truck equipment shop- we built truck bodies all the time. Wether stretching a body making a limo, or making 2 door trucks into 4 door extra bodies, we had to do this stuff daily. Fighting your way through it with flux core/ inner shield is doable - but harder. But still, I am telling you, set up scrap metal of proper thickness on a table and get to where you weld a bead. Then go tack it together. A 0.1 second zap he is doing is not a tack. That guy would be fired on day one working in a production shop.
I can’t even bare to watch the rest of the “how to welding” video. Its like someone saying they are a Christian, then bragging how much fun they just had at the strip club. In my world- the law of non contradiction still is true.
I have gone through another small sheet of material from Tractor Supply to practice on. The bead is getting better looking, but still ugly as expected with my novice ability. I dialed the setting back to .5v, 101A. This seems to be better for the consistent bead. One thing I am seeing is that the "old" metal is better matched with 18ga., I have been working with 22ga, and 16ga as it is readily available locally. I cut some scrap off the "best looking" part of the rocker and threw some tacks to it, and blew through. Settings will need to be lower for butting up those pieces for sure.
I've been messing around with outer rocker fitments for now, grinding, cutting, fitting, etc. Our trip for TN the first week of April has been booked. I need to get moving to get this unit done for the trip. This year we were planning on not going, but the entire family wanted too. Kinda has me in a time crunch.