should have used a 3/16 wall 21/2 " tube then the 2' would slide in easy ,1/4' wall with seem too much extra work to make fit ther will be a little slop but not enough to mess up it intended purpose . made alot of hitches over the years just the way its done they use to make 2 1/2 seamless tube in stee on 1/4 wall l but as far as i know no more always had to grind seam out lucky you had a mill ive used flap discs to take down thicknes now i use 3/16 wall on receivers
was wondering why such a heavy duty pad eye ,did the hook fit thru ? i would have reused that round bar that you cut off . worked fine before save some fab time nice job love stainless work for things like this
Nice video. Crazy how much stainless warps right lol 😂 really it’s not funny it’s annoying. I like that Milwaukee tool I have the die grinders from them was looking into the file one it was on sale recently 👍
I love your channel, i am curious about weld settings for the thicker stainless with the Dynasty, I do all thin material but who knows when the need will arise, Greetings from GA and merry Christmas.
Just crank the amps and let er rip lol. That’s what I do really maybe I’ll mess with gas flow and post flow a little but me at least I think thinner stainless is where the trucks come in handy. I’m not sure what he did though to be honest I do know the dynasty’s have some cool adjustments you can make especially with the expansion card I seen people go into the settings a little with ac aluminum pretty cool. He does good work that was some thicker stainless 👍
@@carlwhite8225 Thanks! It really does depend on how thick the material is you’re, welding with, as well as the tungsten size you choose. For this project, with 3/32 tungsten I believe I set the welder to 150 amps, and I did have the pedal mashed to the floor while welding the 1/2” plate. If you’re running a pedal, I would turn it up to like 175, get a thick piece of material, and run it. That way you will be able to fine tune where you like it. I think every person likes their settings a little bit different. Hopefully that gives you a starter point. Thanks for watching!
Thanks for another great video!
@@michaelbigelow367 Thank you for watching!
should have used a 3/16 wall 21/2 " tube then the 2' would slide in easy ,1/4' wall with seem too much extra work to make fit ther will be a little slop but not enough to mess up it intended purpose . made alot of hitches over the years just the way its done they use to make 2 1/2 seamless tube in stee on 1/4 wall l but as far as i know no more always had to grind seam out lucky you had a mill ive used flap discs to take down thicknes now i use 3/16 wall on receivers
Absolutely! Trying to build a receiver tube that tight is only asking for trouble. Not just for fabrication but for the customer down the road.
Nice and clean
@@nelsonglass6 Thanks, and thank you for watching!
Awesome work. Appreciate the lesson and channel m
@@danramos281 Thanks for watching Dan!
We need a shop to buy some merch. I’d rock one of those hoodies for sure
@@nate_hinkle I’m slowly working on it. Stay tuned and I’ll let you know when it’s available. Thanks for watching!
Outstanding project well done. Your attention to detail is what set you above the rest.
@@Scott_69HemiDart Thank you, I appreciate that, and thank you for watching!
Great intro excellent design and build love stainless
@@Weldon-c2t Thanks, I’m a sucker for stainless too. Thanks for watching!
great work !!! but that over kill welding tho
That looks really nice.
@@JonesMetalCraft Thanks, and thank you for watching!
was wondering why such a heavy duty pad eye ,did the hook fit thru ? i would have reused that round bar that you cut off . worked fine before save some fab time nice job love stainless work for things like this
@@raycorb2938 The hook fit in the new one great. I tend to over-build things. It’s just how I roll. Thanks for watching!
Bon Boulo 😆😆👍👍
@@paulusmarc Thanks for watching!
Nice work!
@@earlcavenaugh6459 Thanks for watching!
Awesome job as always! About 00:00: it's not a viewers hunting season, so don't shoot any of us please, we want to see next episodes of your work! :)
@@MrEndeller Just practicing the call, Lol. Thanks for watching!
Nice job as usual, looks great. You should really use a fresh air helmet though and be careful with your health, take care.
@@Dibulok Thank you, I’m looking into it. Thanks for watching!
@Freedomfabrication777 @Freedomfabrication777 Yeah! You should go for a speedglas 9100fx or G5-01. They are great :)
Should have taken some artist liberty with that bow eye. Could've made it into a bow (hood) ornament!
@@emeltea33 That’s about as ornamental as I get. Lol. Thanks for watching!
Would've appreciated seeing you use the press to straighten out that 1/2" plate.
@@Six_ftdeep32 I will have to show it in a future video. Wasn’t the first time, certainly won’t be that last! Thanks for watching!
Nice video. Crazy how much stainless warps right lol 😂 really it’s not funny it’s annoying. I like that Milwaukee tool I have the die grinders from them was looking into the file one it was on sale recently 👍
@@WojnarskiWeldingFabricaion That band file is definitely a game changer in certain situations. Get you one. You won’t regret it! Thanks for watching!
@ next time I see a deal I might grab one I like a lot of Milwaukee tools 👍
I love your channel, i am curious about weld settings for the thicker stainless with the Dynasty, I do all thin material but who knows when the need will arise, Greetings from GA and merry Christmas.
Just crank the amps and let er rip lol. That’s what I do really maybe I’ll mess with gas flow and post flow a little but me at least I think thinner stainless is where the trucks come in handy. I’m not sure what he did though to be honest I do know the dynasty’s have some cool adjustments you can make especially with the expansion card I seen people go into the settings a little with ac aluminum pretty cool. He does good work that was some thicker stainless 👍
@@carlwhite8225 Thanks! It really does depend on how thick the material is you’re, welding with, as well as the tungsten size you choose. For this project, with 3/32 tungsten I believe I set the welder to 150 amps, and I did have the pedal mashed to the floor while welding the 1/2” plate. If you’re running a pedal, I would turn it up to like 175, get a thick piece of material, and run it. That way you will be able to fine tune where you like it. I think every person likes their settings a little bit different. Hopefully that gives you a starter point. Thanks for watching!
I don’t usually comment. That intro had me laughing pretty hard
@@blunt750 Glad to hear my spaz humor gives someone a laugh. Thanks for watching!
it's not 3 3/32, man. it's 80mm.
I was just going to post that.
I can’t see a reason why he can’t use that to winch the boat onto the trailer and not use the winch on the trailer.
@@dantadysak5485 I guess he could if he wanted. Merry Christmas, and thanks for watching!
freedumb fabrication
@@EricCampbellUAV I’ve been called worse. Usually there’s a reason behind it though. Rough day?