I've got a welder and started trying a few pieces recently, I've watched lots of stuff and chatted with mates but that did little to improve my welds, all came down to just using the damn thing and getting a feel for what was working and what was pigeon shit!
@@k19widow the best advice I can give is figure out what the welder wants for settings. Every piece of steel you weld will need a different setting and you need to learn what the settings do to your weld.
@@jacobcurran5543 exactly. That and like they said in the video what works for them prolly wont work for you. Their have only been a few people that could grab a mig that I have set for myself and be able to use it and make it weld the same as me. Gotta figure out what your settings are at the end of the day and run with it. Keep notes on what settings work best for you for various applications
@@autohog Check it out for yourself with any EU inspector or EU welder trade school. At the top of youre 'E", you create a void for inclusions. We used to stack dimes with MIG but are now forbidden to do so because of it. Just like stacking uphil: exact same problem.
Been selling Industrial Cutting Tools, Pneumatic Tools and Abrasives for 42 years. But can admit that I know NOTHING about actual welding. I found this video not only educational but entertaining as well. I can understand why a truly great weld starts with material preperation and removal of that pesky Mill Scale but when you began talking techniques is when it got interesting to me. Thanks... I just subscribed so I might learn more.
I’m glad you gents are showing “Working” the wire instead of a flat drag , your welds are beyond awesome , perfect deposition , low crown , even fill .. I give you an A+
Finally, someone else who can weld proper!! ❤️❤️❤️❤️ You boys are MORE than welcome to come work in my shop in Fort Worth!!! All I'm getting is kids who graduated from "Weld Stool" who can't even prep, or set the machines right!! 👍💪💪🤜🤛👋👋✌️✌️😉😁😁😎😎😎😎
Man if only I had half the confidence in front of camera, like I do towards welding... It was great having you out and talking shop! I wouldn't be nowhere near where I am today without people like you, who are willing to put in an effort at trying to help others out! Its taken thousands of hours behind a hood to get somewhat decent, but it was always helpful, having an open mind, and listening to what anybody had to say on the subject. There's alot of information out there, and I'm glad I can finally be a part of some of it! Brad you did a killer job on this video! Look forward to seeing all your others!
Hey Rod, I'm fairly new to welding. Just to clarify, were you short-arc welding or pulse? thanks. Cuz if your beautiful welds can be acheived using standard short-arc then this is really encouraging and something to strive for. Please let me know thanks. And if you can recommend a Mig machine under $1500 that would be great as well 👊
Finally found a channel that's on a level I can LEARN FROM!!!! Been welding 40 hours plus hood DOWN for 6 years. Production welding. Tig mig midstream aluminum stainless Muntz bronze etc... YOU GUYS ARE AWESOME!!!!
I’m 35 now. Thanks to my dad owning a cnc machine shop, I’ve been machining since I was about 5 years old. I’m rather embarrassed to say I have never welded. We’ve always outsourced all our welding. Just here to expand my skill set and knowledge. Kudos to all you awesome welders out there.
Yes and you are exactly the type of guy that gets attracted to this type of content since "stacking of dimes" is not even applicable for European standards. This is only for show. If you are about to learn to weld, be sure to learn according to the European EN standards. Stacking dimes are a waste of time and only for social media or motor shows/ for visually exposed parts. This is not my opinion, this is a fact. You would come along trying to learn scratching your head why your settings are so wrong etc etc, spending weeks, months of not focusing on the right things. A MIG/MAG weld and a TIG weld is NOT supposed to be including any "walking the cup" or other back/forth movement. You are supposed to go straight straight straight, as straight as possible, specially on thin materials 2mm and less.
As you say practice makes perfect but learning by watching and listening to good tradesmen is the key. Or watching educational videos like this well done. Retired Multi coded pipe welder Scotland 👍🏴
I mig weld aluminum and mild steel on a daily basis. I burn thru 22 lbs of aluminum wire every 3 days. Welding aluminum dramatically improves the way your steel mig welds look! Aluminum freezes so fast you see absolutely every little wiggle but steel is more forgiving and those tiny wiggles dont show up! I use the same exact technique when mig welding short circuit! Best part of the video is how down to earth and modest these boys are! I can see where running the .030 wire gives you that little bit of extra time to get that perfect stack!
Please make a mig aluminum video. There are a few out there, but I still struggle with it. I can tig alum just fine, but that isn't always what I need for the work I'm doing, as you well know. I agree, if you can mig aluminum, you should transition to mig steel with ease.
With nothing available that fit a hold below deck close enough to gain 20 gallons of reserve fuel and end a buddies practice and reliance on poorly secured plastic tanks in the stern live well's compartment that used to bounce on or float above his Sea Fury's hull and ride out the seas inherently listing 20° in the bilge per her Deep-V lines, he supplied two halves for a tailor made aluminum tank and tweeko's teflon liner conversion kit, and a big bottle of argon. I sailed right through the first foot of that maiden voyage on a fair wind and heading, confident in my plotted course. Preparation and a brief study had this amateur plying like any master. Tacking true and straight, I could see it in my wake. I had laid a bead proficiently and was thinking of reporting back as pride began to overtake me and projects of my own came to mind along with a grin at the thought of donning the hat of Aluminum welder. Then the freaking phone rang. The sounding of the bell may as well been an alarm for the havac that ensued. As i recall, I took the helm of the Tweeko into welding gloved hands unawares but the instant I engaged found her unresponsive. A bubbling sea of aluminium came up on all sides and bail as I might , grinding down to the deck, as if I could start afresh, but resumption only saw her awash, swamped under that bubbling, foaming, relentless liquid that moments before had promised to carry me to new horizons and status. Horror and frustration filled my auto-darkening helmet. The gloves came off, determination stepped in for preparation. Then the bulkheads of my mind collapsed one by one, conceding failure a little late of it all going under. As a vessel to contain gasoline it had been on the bottom from the moment that second watch began. My offshore fishing mantra, a reminder to tend to maintenance and preparation with both feet on dry ground, and to budget needs and concerns over wants and aesthetic always, and redundancy for emergency was borrowed for aluminium welding and some of that teflon tubing became bushings for noisy line levelers on a fishing pole because "A lot can go wrong out there" In retrospect I concluded that small segments , maybe 5-8 inches of the joint, should have been treated or retreated cleaned and de-O2 imediatly before welding and just as important I always felt I should have flooded the interior of the tank with argon to prevent O2 right under the joint from heating and pushing out into the hot metal. I call it a tank. Lol it's one of my scrap metal bens. I forget how many gallons we gave up with an off the shelf tank, it was enough to prevent our mingling out on the outter banks with those who could budget for what we had wanted but I never smelled fuel in bilge water again. In your opinion would more meticulous cleaning and the extra gas done the trick. What additional steps ,if any, have you taken to maintain integrity in different environments or purpose ?
One thing needs to be expressed... You must be comfortable... Relaxed... And steady... And also have good clear vision.... And then practice, practice... You guys inspired me to go try again... Thanks
Working as a welder in the semi trailer, sheet metal fabrication and automotive industries I found that the circular oscillating technique produces some of the most consistent looking welds also moving from side to side in an arching pattern works well especially if you have inconsistent gaps to fill, setting the welder up to have a clean consistent sound with no popping or wire burn back is also important, the kind of welds these guys are doing requires a steady hand, patience and consistency.
I know you're speaking English right now, but I'm new. What's wire burn back. Imma assume that I'm experiencing this as my welds look like mange-riddled possum hide...burnt to a crisp with wire hairs poking out here and there! I need a class.
@@choiceblade Sounds like you dont have gas to me or you Voltage isnt high enough or your wire speed is to high. And i believe that wire burn back is when your wire actually melts higher up on the wire than just the tip of the wire if that makes since. typically happens with me if im to far away from what im trying to weld.
But any "walking the cup" or back/forth is actually avoidable at all cost according to EN norm (European standard). Keep that in mind. Follow someone that teaches welding according to international standards, then, after at least some year in production you would consider learning this art social media visual appearance welding. th-cam.com/video/JEFd56ofHos/w-d-xo.html
@@choiceblade Burn back is when the wire speed is not high enough to match the voltage/metal transfer you are set at. It's when the wire literally burns back and sticks to the contact tip, often requiring the replacement of said tip.
Thank GOD, you guys I just found this channel. Just bought my first welder (Titan 40 flux core). You...my...my welds look like METEOR impact craters compar...there's no point in comparing. Uuuuuuuuugh!
You can make consistent looking welds with zero oscillation as well. All this fancy oscillating is often just cosmetic and can be very compromised in a situation that requires good root fusion and pressure/bend test. While the weld in this video looks plenty hot, a weld with heavy oscillation memory can be a sign of a cold compromised weld.
You are abosolutely right. People that use this technique need to bend test their welds to make sure they are getting proper fusion. The first time I applied for a job at a shop that bend tested prospect's welds, I did 2 coupons. One with stacked dime welds for looks, the other with near zero oscillation, because I had a sneaking suspicion that the stacked dime weld would fail. It did. Lack of fusion and cold lap. I was hired because I said I thought my first weld would fail so I did another one. I don't care how good your technique is, if your welds look like the welds in the video, you will have at least some cold lap and lack of fusion. Whether it is enough to make the weld too weak to hold depends alot on the experience of the person doing it. Thats why I don't recommend this technique for beginners. While the application of the parts in the video is probably very overkill and likely doesn't unduly stress the weld and they will probably hold up fine, in an application that does rely more on the strength of the weld it is not a good technique to use. The other saving grace here with these guys is the cleanliness of the metal- the lack of mill scale in their joints is good to see and that's very important if you're welding on the cold side. A coldish weld will often run right over the top of mill scale and not penetrate at all. This has all been pointed out already I think (rarely read all the comments) so what I mostly came here to say is that when it comes to developing a technique, testing will show you everything you need to know. I encourage everyone, even veteran weldors, to do it from time to time. It will teach you what not to do better than anything, and if you want to stack the dimes, testing will teach you how to get the best weld you can using this technique.
@@cheatinggravity173 No doubt. My first welding job was working for Kubota and you'd get run out of there for stacking dimes. While this process is considerably more visually appealing and is more desirable for welds to be shown off, it's not done in heavy industrial welding for the reasons you guys mentioned: it's easier to get cold lap.
@@cheatinggravity173 The welds in the video are basically "show welds" as the title points out- MIG like TIG. Though they "Look pretty" they are likely low quality, weak welds. The faults you pointed out have been well documented and discussed. This is the negative effect social media has had on everything in society. Bunch of fake instagram welders.
"It's just practice.." Yes! Indeed it is. When people ask me how I can get such perfect welds done I answer..." I've been welding for +25 years and that's all there is to it." :)
You guys are really humble. So friendly and informative. But I really want to say this, settings and prep is one thing. But you can't do any of this with correct information only. It`s pure art watching this. You guys are clearly passionate about your work. And you take great pride in it. This ( in my mind ) leads to the kind of amazing quality you achieve. I am really impressed. Thank you for sharing!
Hello:::WOW Looking Good. I just got my Vulcan 220 Mig, at 72 going to learn Mig welding !!! Biggest TIP Clean your steel !!! Now I am scrapping up big washers or anything else to learn on.
They say a good welder is typically a bad grinder (because they don’t have to grind their welds to clean them up). I don’t know about that, all I know is that I’m a bad ass grinder.
Yeah, but true 100% bro. I used to be a bad grinder till I changed my mind to cleaned them up super super crazy well clean then I found the beautiful Bead since then I been practicing about grinding skill as much as I can lolll nice to meet you a welder from another side of this world, Im Siam from Thailand .
Most high profile work actually requires weld blending. I weld inconel turbine veins now. Even when i did production mig i still had to grind per costumer spec. I can finesse a 5” grinder like its a pen.
I really like the close camera work to allow us to see the puddle. Others blind you or just can’t get in there to see it. Keep perfecting the close up looks. That’s how I learn best. By watching a pro like the guy who made those pretty welds. The arc seemed more “tame” and cooler than what I see so often.
I have never welded before so I don't know anything about it. But I can definitely appreciate and be grateful for those people who endeavor to be true masters of their craft. No doubt the welds serve a critically important role in the structural integrity of the product but many actually look quite beautiful and ornate.
This is great advice on the fundamentals. The guy that taught me stressed that I should focus on the looks of my welds. He would make me grind them off and redo them if if they didn't pass his beauty test. Once I started focusing on the looks of my welds everything else came together and my welds were overall better.
Though I'm no welder, I've always found the art of welding to be interesting. Most folks don't understand what it takes to be a great welder. Good video!
Stunning. Perfectly stacked beautiful dimes. Everytime. I'm talking about my own of course ha ha ha haaaah... So anyway, what I used to do is wrap a piece of cloth around the wire and hold it in place with a clothespin right before it entered the whip to clean the oil residue off.
New to your channel and great looking welds from a novice welder for over 50 years. Started with gas in HS and have gas, mig and still want a tig, buy it is another investment, and my age, it's hard to justify, but still looking for a good deal. I'm not cheap, I'm thifty.
I’ve been steadily welding for 8 years now and still can’t stack em as perfect as those guys. But then again I never tried .030. I’m going to give it a go now.
One thing I got to say for young guys starting out in this kinda career. Use proper eye protection when grinding and welding ! No matter how uncomfortable you feel or silly your colleagues think you look remember you only get 1 pair of eyes , look after them !
I'd add ear protection too...being around fabbing and welding pipe and construction in general for several decades (plus dozens of rock concerts over my lifetime), my ears are SHOT!!! The ringing is so loud, I can't believe my next door neighbor can't hear it! Another one to take care of is your lungs...try to not breathe too much welding smoke. I've learned these lessons the hard way, because I didn't listen to the old timers when they told me to protect my ears, eyes, lungs, back, knees, etc...my eyes were the only thing that made it out relatively unscathed, although I have had metal and other debris dug out of them a few times. Fun shit.
I had some folks poke fun when I did this technique when I put my racecar together calling it "figging" (Fake tigging) and said the welds weren't as strong bla bla bla..... I have welded cages, and floor plates, motor plates, exhaust and structural components like this with no failures. The heat penetration is good and the welds are clean! Glad to see someone else do it. Looks awesome guys!
In high school, we had ‘trades’ studies. We had welding, automotive, machining, carpentry, electronics and graphic design. At the time, 1984-1986, it was pretty progressive. I entered welding. I’d done some fabrication at the time and thought ‘easy’. It was harder than anything I imagined. After high school, I entered the military (Combat Engineering) and started learning demolition. I ended up with two broken legs, fractured ribs and a concussion, all because I thought I knew more than my instructors. I went to work with a company cleaning up oil spills, chemical spills, fires, anything that was ‘ethyl-methyl-bad-shit-fucked-up’. No welding. Got tired with that, became a truck driver. No welding. I THEN became a police officer (my father-in-law, a police officer, wouldn’t let his daughter marry a truck driver). No welding. Now, I’m retired and want to weld. I appreciate the ‘tips-&-tricks’. After 30+ years the machines, techniques, technology, gases, rods, EVERYTHING, is different. And, I’m watching ‘kids’ welding soda cans together, thinking, ‘the fffffffffffffffffuuuuuuuuu am I watching’. Laying beads that make me sick. Anyways, keep em coming.
Those are the same exact techniques I use. With the "cursive e" technique I like to run the machine a little hot to maintain penetration, because I am moving the puddle around a bit more. Great video.
You're probably naturally more artistic then most of us. I would recommend that people who struggle with consistency be taught the whip he showed first its the fastest way to quality welds for those of us that have no natural talent. The other one that's like the Es but simpler is a back slash motion advancing the bottom first each time. It's kind of the best parts of both techniques combined. Think of it like the Es if they had no loops.
Cool. Something new to learn. I worked mostly in the aerospace industry as a repairer, mechanic, and MRO sheet metal fabricator. I now learning to MIG weld. Its great! TIG, machinist, and auto-cad are next on my list.
Awesome work Brad!! The boys down at overkill are absolutely killing it! I believe quality isn't expensive its priceless. Keep up the work brother, I'm loving the videos
Looks good. I use that technique for aluminum but I dont short arc. Pulsed spray on everything because of lack of fusion issues. And I dont use the little ass wire because I hate moving that slow jump to .045 on steel and 3/64" on Aluminum. Thats what I use on standard pulse or I can switch to Profile Pulse and you can adjust the frequency, arc length of the pulse and how much wire the feeder will push. Basically you can push a stringer with no manipulation to achieve the same effect. Referring to a Miller XMT 350 MPa with S-74 MPa plus feeder
This actually just meant the world to me for information. Im just getting into welding and will be picking up a Lincoln Electric 88 amp Handy Mig welder. So finding this before ive even started, gives me the basis of what i should be starting of doing, and how i can eventually make gorgeous welds. I will def be subbing and watching more, thank you so much!
This is for all the kids in school. just wanted to inform y’all that if you have to code weld NEVER EVER do this. The technique used is a whip and that can actually fail you on an X Ray because it pushes imperfections from the front of the puddle into the weld which can lead to porosity below the surface. If it’s non code welding you’re fine to use it tho
Amen to that. I have been a CWI for AWS D1.1 structural code for 23 years. I truly don't mean to offend, but this technique is NOT correct for what I inspect. It would be a huge problem for sure.
makes me want to weld stuff again.. awh just drawing circles and trusting the circles, what you call rinse and repeat. it's just been so long since i welded. welding is so meditative.
Lots of perfect welders apparently. I personally need to learn. Solid info. I went with .035 for my first spool because...perhaps I should change out. .035 needs heat and penetration else it builds way too quick. If I start weave pattrerns with .035, I'm building ugly piles of filler. Problem is, average steel thicknesses I'm working with don't like that much heat. Anyway, time to practice, thanks fellas!!! I'm subbed for sure.
The wire speed and voltage he has set for this type of welding would work alright with .035, but it is similar to what I used for 3G applications on .045. The .035 would probably want to be pushed closer to 20V with the similar wire speed. I used to do a half moon style whip when I did flat or horizontal welding, of course, I haven't been doing it professionally for almost 5 years now, so that process may have changed for me by now if I were still doing it. If I were doing similar to what he did (hydraulic tanks makes me think of this same setup) I would have done a forward-back weave to maintain the penetration for it. Like others have said, though, practice makes perfect, and I was nowhere near perfect after 13 years lol!
Amazing work, you're the best welder I can see in long time (sorry I don't know speak English). Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience with us.
Wow! what beautiful welding. Also a great tutorial. Straight to the point with all the info one needs to weld great. No drawn out video full of bs. Just a perfect job, as far as Im concerned. I cant wait to see more
Yes agreed, too many TH-camrs try to emulate the traditional tv show format with lots of talking in front of the camera, and setups and jokes, and tomfoolery, and side stories. That’s great sometimes but more often I just want to learn about something specific or learn something I never knew existed.
i really like the semi-slo motion shots as you are drawing on the table too. was trying to figure out what the difference between .30 and .35 and stumble on this vid and im glad i clicked on it
Great info!! My welding has never looked super pretty but I've never had anything let go. I'll be welding a lot soon so I'll be incorporating your methods. Thanks!!
No makeup needed with a grinder nice looking welds for cosmetics depending upon the application to get maximum penetration the welds won’t be as pretty but they would be stronger and yes they do look like TIG welds great video. Not all welds have to be prone to an X-ray Criteria unless it’s total structural like a pipe liner welder or spot on your welds are simply beautiful and strong enough for most applications great job guys I’ve been welding for over 40 years stick mig tig hydrogen oxy ac was certified now I just tell people what to do as I spent my time in the trenches I can tell you from experience work smarter not harder or you’ll ruin your body
@@shimarlie1 you will learn the heat of electrode to the thickness of plate. so if thickness of plate is x then heat of electrode should be around y-z y-z being a variable so lets just say for instance 110-130 amps.
@@shimarlie1 to me there welding to cold at 18 volts. So to help, they’ve slowed there wire speed down. So it’s giving a really pretty stack of dimes (or tig) look. But if you go off a Miller or Lincoln voltage chart your you’d want to be closer to 21 volts. Unless your using straight CO2. But this overkillracing guy is a better welder then me. But he’s using so much filler in that joint he’s going to get a lot of strength out of that weld. But at 18 volts on any machine your going to get a proud weld.
Aesthetics are important when making custom parts for someone's car or other automotive project. Will it pass and xray. Nope. But it looks perty and it will be strong enough for it's intended purpose.
🤦 never fails… always someone in the comments that has to throw in their two cents about “slag inclusion” and welds “not passing inspection.” So fucking annoying.. does it look good? Does it hold? Yes then who gives a fuck about inspections and X-rays
@@Real.Alpheus that’s exactly what I do for a living. Not everything is production welding that needs to be tested. There is custom fabrication which is what I do where you don’t have some fat inspector walking around telling you how to weld
Beautiful work. People need to remember though that with all the settings right, and the material prep right, you still need to have the hands for this. Practice practice practice. 10,000 hours. But yeah, .030 makes life easier on this application for sure. Still, seems to slow the process way down. I would probably lean towards just using a TIG. However, if you can MIG like that you will be impressing people at the show and shine.
10,000 hours. LMAO. dude that is over a YEAR of arc time. come the fuck on man. if you welded for 8 hours a day, never stopping to change bottles, wire, fit up nothing. just straight welding 8 hours a day. 7 days a week. 52 weeks a year 10k hours is 3.5 years. This technique can be learned and mastered in 2 weeks, tops. Ive taught hundreds of kids to weld like this in our shop over the years. Stacking dimes with a mig is a parlor trick, not some trophy of mastery.
@@DieselRamcharger you are correct Sir. Its more about footage of weld but still keeping quality top notch. In my experience with aluminum at least 300 feet a day is a norm if conditions permit.
I’m new to welding and I’m starting with smaw welder. Is it possible to stack dimes with my style of welding machine or is it a straight bead? I’m intending to do chassis and exhaust with this setup
Dude at the end said it best; what works for the other guy, may not work best for you. You can get a rough guesstimate from your buddy whos a golden arm, but you'll have to fine tune your machine that fits you best! Practice, practice, practice...💪🤘🇺🇸
Great video and I appreciate all the effort put into it! Been following the guys over at Overkill for quite some time and it's great to see them in a video demonstrating their mad skills! Just a quick question...what CFH do they find themselves running their 75/25 indoors? Thanks!
So I'm in P-Tech (College Corse) in High school and I thought this was a Normal weld but I guess it just came to me naturally. I think I had it perfected around my 4th day of starting with the cursive E type method.
I was watching with my husband and you were making an inter cooler, before you added the fittings, it was beautiful. I could put that out on a table. Loved it.
I learned this technique from one of the ancients about 10 years ago. No one has been able to figure out how I do it since lol. I call my pattern more the ‘cursive J’ and I push the wire back into the puddle instead of pushing the wire forward essentially ‘pulling’ the gun I guess... My welds turn out stellar 98% of the time and haven’t had a single one break yet. Great video though fellas!
It's a shit technique if the intent is to lay down some welds that have good penetration and structural integrity. This "stacking dimes" nonsense would never pass code or an etch test.
I would teach this at my work. Guys never passed the test until they went over the top. But I used similar ratio speed and heat settings as Rod and always got asked why I weld the way I do lol
Thanks heaps guy's. I really appreciate. I just could never put it all together with MIG /TIG.....no matter how much i tried......Im a first class arc /fusion / braze. / oxy....fabricater.☺
I Appreciate you all! Have a great weekend!
Y’all need some speedglas! Heard they have a new tig helmet coming out!
Aj 15 I’ve had a few. Not a big fan 🙁
@@hourglassingenuity103 oh no why not??
I wish my 3450 fit and weighed like the sentinel
I made that same weld with my Harbor Fright 90 amp flux core machine
He finally says it at the end. It's all about practice. It's that simple.
Sorry we took so long to say it!
it's like anything else,,,, practice. you were either meant to do it or your not''''''''
I've got a welder and started trying a few pieces recently, I've watched lots of stuff and chatted with mates but that did little to improve my welds, all came down to just using the damn thing and getting a feel for what was working and what was pigeon shit!
@@k19widow the best advice I can give is figure out what the welder wants for settings. Every piece of steel you weld will need a different setting and you need to learn what the settings do to your weld.
@@jacobcurran5543 exactly. That and like they said in the video what works for them prolly wont work for you. Their have only been a few people that could grab a mig that I have set for myself and be able to use it and make it weld the same as me. Gotta figure out what your settings are at the end of the day and run with it. Keep notes on what settings work best for you for various applications
When you think you're a good welder ... there's always someone better
Never stop learning 👍🏼
very true. took gmaw at TCAT and realized only after graduating that i didnt know shit. every video and article helps as much as practice itself
Dude if you can’t do this then you was never good…this isn’t even X-ray quality work.But, Definitely nice work for what it’s intended for
@@jeepwk6.5L Hey dude, there are xray welds that can be ugly and non-Xray ones that can be beautiful.
@@Lgvulin true, looks isn’t everything
All the commenters in this channel are the better welders.
Awesome video. No arrogant prick telling you how it suppose to be done just humble guys with great skill giving advice. 👍🏻
I went to modern welding school but you know we can never learn enough this is going to become my favorite channel great job guys thumbs up
It's all old common sense shit you should learn on day #1
I’ve been in army welding and body shop for 50 years . That’s the best mig weld I’ve ever seen . That’s pure art...
That’s amazing Pete! Thanks for sharing. That sounds like a lot of good stories. Thank you. He did a great job! 🙌🏻 have a wonderful day sir.
Pressure A=B welder from EU here, stacking dimes may look cool but are forbidden in alot of industries here in EU....
Why is that?@@PanzerChicken69
@@autohog Check it out for yourself with any EU inspector or EU welder trade school. At the top of youre 'E", you create a void for inclusions. We used to stack dimes with MIG but are now forbidden to do so because of it. Just like stacking uphil: exact same problem.
Interesting, I appreciate the reply. So would flat drag tend to reduce the inclusions?
@@PanzerChicken69
Been selling Industrial Cutting Tools, Pneumatic Tools and Abrasives for 42 years. But can admit that I know NOTHING about actual welding. I found this video not only educational but entertaining as well. I can understand why a truly great weld starts with material preperation and removal of that pesky Mill Scale but when you began talking techniques is when it got interesting to me. Thanks... I just subscribed so I might learn more.
I’m glad you gents are showing
“Working” the wire instead of a flat drag , your welds are beyond awesome , perfect deposition , low crown , even fill .. I give you an A+
One of the guys at work just got out of school and was saying that (flat drag) is all they teach now
@@zomdrag5360 Because its the strongest and proper way to mig weld.
Finally, someone else who can weld proper!! ❤️❤️❤️❤️
You boys are MORE than welcome to come work in my shop in Fort Worth!!! All I'm getting is kids who graduated from "Weld Stool" who can't even prep, or set the machines right!!
👍💪💪🤜🤛👋👋✌️✌️😉😁😁😎😎😎😎
Man if only I had half the confidence in front of camera, like I do towards welding... It was great having you out and talking shop! I wouldn't be nowhere near where I am today without people like you, who are willing to put in an effort at trying to help others out! Its taken thousands of hours behind a hood to get somewhat decent, but it was always helpful, having an open mind, and listening to what anybody had to say on the subject. There's alot of information out there, and I'm glad I can finally be a part of some of it! Brad you did a killer job on this video! Look forward to seeing all your others!
Thanks so much! It was a pleasure meeting you and I’m looking forward to getting out there again! Keep killing it dude!
You looked stoned lol
@@scaven09 I dont smoke or drink any!
Hey Rod, I'm fairly new to welding. Just to clarify, were you short-arc welding or pulse? thanks. Cuz if your beautiful welds can be acheived using standard short-arc then this is really encouraging and something to strive for. Please let me know thanks. And if you can recommend a Mig machine under $1500 that would be great as well 👊
Finally found a channel that's on a level I can LEARN FROM!!!! Been welding 40 hours plus hood DOWN for 6 years. Production welding. Tig mig midstream aluminum stainless Muntz bronze etc...
YOU GUYS ARE AWESOME!!!!
I’m 35 now. Thanks to my dad owning a cnc machine shop, I’ve been machining since I was about 5 years old. I’m rather embarrassed to say I have never welded. We’ve always outsourced all our welding. Just here to expand my skill set and knowledge. Kudos to all you awesome welders out there.
Yes and you are exactly the type of guy that gets attracted to this type of content since "stacking of dimes" is not even applicable for European standards. This is only for show. If you are about to learn to weld, be sure to learn according to the European EN standards. Stacking dimes are a waste of time and only for social media or motor shows/ for visually exposed parts. This is not my opinion, this is a fact. You would come along trying to learn scratching your head why your settings are so wrong etc etc, spending weeks, months of not focusing on the right things. A MIG/MAG weld and a TIG weld is NOT supposed to be including any "walking the cup" or other back/forth movement. You are supposed to go straight straight straight, as straight as possible, specially on thin materials 2mm and less.
@@Heddanofarsan if it passes whatever inspection process and their is no explicitly stated wps or variety of wps who really gives a shit🤷🏻♂️
As you say practice makes perfect but learning by watching and listening to good tradesmen is the key. Or watching educational videos like this well done. Retired Multi coded pipe welder Scotland 👍🏴
I was an owner opperater and welding foreman. I chased pipelines for thirty five years. Excellent video! Great looking welds! Liked and subscribed.👍
🙌🏻 Thank you!
I've been MIG welding 27+ years. That's some sexy stuff right there. Stunningly beautiful welds. Great job and excellent explanations too.
I mig weld aluminum and mild steel on a daily basis. I burn thru 22 lbs of aluminum wire every 3 days. Welding aluminum dramatically improves the way your steel mig welds look! Aluminum freezes so fast you see absolutely every little wiggle but steel is more forgiving and those tiny wiggles dont show up! I use the same exact technique when mig welding short circuit! Best part of the video is how down to earth and modest these boys are! I can see where running the .030 wire gives you that little bit of extra time to get that perfect stack!
Your comment has been quite refreshing, thank you so much! I really appreciate you taking the time. 🙏🏻
Please make a mig aluminum video. There are a few out there, but I still struggle with it. I can tig alum just fine, but that isn't always what I need for the work I'm doing, as you well know. I agree, if you can mig aluminum, you should transition to mig steel with ease.
With nothing available that fit a hold below deck close enough to gain 20 gallons of reserve fuel and end a buddies practice and reliance on poorly secured plastic tanks in the stern live well's compartment that used to bounce on or float above his Sea Fury's hull and ride out the seas inherently listing 20° in the bilge per her Deep-V lines, he supplied two halves for a tailor made aluminum tank and tweeko's teflon liner conversion kit, and a big bottle of argon. I sailed right through the first foot of that maiden voyage on a fair wind and heading, confident in my plotted course. Preparation and a brief study had this amateur plying like any master. Tacking true and straight, I could see it in my wake. I had laid a bead proficiently and was thinking of reporting back as pride began to overtake me and projects of my own came to mind along with a grin at the thought of donning the hat of Aluminum welder.
Then the freaking phone rang. The sounding of the bell may as well been an alarm for the havac that ensued. As i recall, I took the helm of the Tweeko into welding gloved hands unawares but the instant I engaged found her unresponsive. A bubbling sea of aluminium came up on all sides and bail as I might , grinding down to the deck, as if I could start afresh, but resumption only saw her awash, swamped under that bubbling, foaming, relentless liquid that moments before had promised to carry me to new horizons and status. Horror and frustration filled my auto-darkening helmet. The gloves came off, determination stepped in for preparation. Then the bulkheads of my mind collapsed one by one, conceding failure a little late of it all going under. As a vessel to contain gasoline it had been on the bottom from the moment that second watch began.
My offshore fishing mantra, a reminder to tend to maintenance and preparation with both feet on dry ground, and to budget needs and concerns over wants and aesthetic always, and redundancy for emergency was borrowed for aluminium welding and some of that teflon tubing became bushings for noisy line levelers on a fishing pole because "A lot can go wrong out there"
In retrospect I concluded that small segments , maybe 5-8 inches of the joint, should have been treated or retreated cleaned and de-O2 imediatly before welding and just as important I always felt I should have flooded the interior of the tank with argon to prevent O2 right under the joint from heating and pushing out into the hot metal. I call it a tank. Lol it's one of my scrap metal bens. I forget how many gallons we gave up with an off the shelf tank, it was enough to prevent our mingling out on the outter banks with those who could budget for what we had wanted but I never smelled fuel in bilge water again.
In your opinion would more meticulous cleaning and the extra gas done the trick. What additional steps ,if any, have you taken to maintain integrity in different environments or purpose ?
@@tcyoung8123 what the fuck did you write here?
I've been watching welding videos for a couple of weeks but this is the best explanation of how ot achieve a decent weld.
This is the most brief and clear video about MIG Welding, I really liked it! Please upload more fab techniques videos! Thank you!
Definitely will! Thank you!
Hands down, the best-looking mig joints i have ever seen. Didn't even know that was possible
Guys, I really appreciate how you put this video together. It was to the point without skipping over details. Good job.
One thing needs to be expressed... You must be comfortable... Relaxed... And steady... And also have good clear vision.... And then practice, practice... You guys inspired me to go try again... Thanks
Working as a welder in the semi trailer, sheet metal fabrication and automotive industries I found that the circular oscillating technique produces some of the most consistent looking welds also moving from side to side in an arching pattern works well especially if you have inconsistent gaps to fill, setting the welder up to have a clean consistent sound with no popping or wire burn back is also important, the kind of welds these guys are doing requires a steady hand, patience and consistency.
I know you're speaking English right now, but I'm new. What's wire burn back. Imma assume that I'm experiencing this as my welds look like mange-riddled possum hide...burnt to a crisp with wire hairs poking out here and there! I need a class.
@@choiceblade Sounds like you dont have gas to me or you Voltage isnt high enough or your wire speed is to high. And i believe that wire burn back is when your wire actually melts higher up on the wire than just the tip of the wire if that makes since. typically happens with me if im to far away from what im trying to weld.
But any "walking the cup" or back/forth is actually avoidable at all cost according to EN norm (European standard). Keep that in mind. Follow someone that teaches welding according to international standards, then, after at least some year in production you would consider learning this art social media visual appearance welding. th-cam.com/video/JEFd56ofHos/w-d-xo.html
@@choiceblade Burn back is when the wire speed is not high enough to match the voltage/metal transfer you are set at. It's when the wire literally burns back and sticks to the contact tip, often requiring the replacement of said tip.
Thank GOD, you guys I just found this channel. Just bought my first welder (Titan 40 flux core). You...my...my welds look like METEOR impact craters compar...there's no point in comparing. Uuuuuuuuugh!
You can make consistent looking welds with zero oscillation as well. All this fancy oscillating is often just cosmetic and can be very compromised in a situation that requires good root fusion and pressure/bend test. While the weld in this video looks plenty hot, a weld with heavy oscillation memory can be a sign of a cold compromised weld.
And also a good way to trap Trash and bust x ray
You are abosolutely right. People that use this technique need to bend test their welds to make sure they are getting proper fusion.
The first time I applied for a job at a shop that bend tested prospect's welds, I did 2 coupons. One with stacked dime welds for looks, the other with near zero oscillation, because I had a sneaking suspicion that the stacked dime weld would fail. It did. Lack of fusion and cold lap. I was hired because I said I thought my first weld would fail so I did another one.
I don't care how good your technique is, if your welds look like the welds in the video, you will have at least some cold lap and lack of fusion. Whether it is enough to make the weld too weak to hold depends alot on the experience of the person doing it. Thats why I don't recommend this technique for beginners.
While the application of the parts in the video is probably very overkill and likely doesn't unduly stress the weld and they will probably hold up fine, in an application that does rely more on the strength of the weld it is not a good technique to use. The other saving grace here with these guys is the cleanliness of the metal- the lack of mill scale in their joints is good to see and that's very important if you're welding on the cold side. A coldish weld will often run right over the top of mill scale and not penetrate at all.
This has all been pointed out already I think (rarely read all the comments) so what I mostly came here to say is that when it comes to developing a technique, testing will show you everything you need to know. I encourage everyone, even veteran weldors, to do it from time to time. It will teach you what not to do better than anything, and if you want to stack the dimes, testing will teach you how to get the best weld you can using this technique.
This is the voice of reason here people, spot on! This guy gets it.
@@cheatinggravity173 No doubt. My first welding job was working for Kubota and you'd get run out of there for stacking dimes. While this process is considerably more visually appealing and is more desirable for welds to be shown off, it's not done in heavy industrial welding for the reasons you guys mentioned: it's easier to get cold lap.
@@cheatinggravity173 The welds in the video are basically "show welds" as the title points out- MIG like TIG. Though they "Look pretty" they are likely low quality, weak welds. The faults you pointed out have been well documented and discussed. This is the negative effect social media has had on everything in society. Bunch of fake instagram welders.
"It's just practice.."
Yes! Indeed it is. When people ask me how I can get such perfect welds done I answer..." I've been welding for +25 years and that's all there is to it." :)
You guys are really humble. So friendly and informative. But I really want to say this, settings and prep is one thing. But you can't do any of this with correct information only.
It`s pure art watching this. You guys are clearly passionate about your work. And you take great pride in it. This ( in my mind ) leads to the kind of amazing quality you achieve.
I am really impressed.
Thank you for sharing!
We appreciate that very much man! Thank you!
Hello:::WOW Looking Good. I just got my Vulcan 220 Mig, at 72 going to learn Mig welding !!! Biggest TIP Clean your steel !!! Now I am scrapping up big washers or anything else to learn on.
They say a good welder is typically a bad grinder (because they don’t have to grind their welds to clean them up). I don’t know about that, all I know is that I’m a bad ass grinder.
Yeah, but true 100% bro. I used to be a bad grinder till I changed my mind to cleaned them up super super crazy well clean then I found the beautiful Bead since then I been practicing about grinding skill as much as I can lolll
nice to meet you a welder from another side of this world, Im Siam from Thailand .
The grinder and paint make me the welder I aint.
Most high profile work actually requires weld blending. I weld inconel turbine veins now. Even when i did production mig i still had to grind per costumer spec. I can finesse a 5” grinder like its a pen.
@@Swagmoney696 got that right! At one point I was comfortable running a 9 inch Milwaukee with one hand! 3
I have 3 grinders
I really like the close camera work to allow us to see the puddle.
Others blind you or just can’t get in there to see it.
Keep perfecting the close up looks. That’s how I learn best. By watching a pro like the guy who made those pretty welds.
The arc seemed more “tame” and cooler than what I see so often.
Best MIG welds I have ever seen.
Thanks so much for watching!
I have never welded before so I don't know anything about it. But I can definitely appreciate and be grateful for those people who endeavor to be true masters of their craft. No doubt the welds serve a critically important role in the structural integrity of the product but many actually look quite beautiful and ornate.
🙌🏻 appreciate the comment. Thank you.
Loved the level of your professionalism. Been into welding profession for over a decade now and absolute love this
Thank you very much for the comment. I really appreciate it! Glad you enjoyed the video. Have a wonderful weekend!
This is great advice on the fundamentals. The guy that taught me stressed that I should focus on the looks of my welds. He would make me grind them off and redo them if if they didn't pass his beauty test. Once I started focusing on the looks of my welds everything else came together and my welds were overall better.
🙌🏻🙌🏻
Though I'm no welder, I've always found the art of welding to be interesting. Most folks don't understand what it takes to be a great welder.
Good video!
Stunning. Perfectly stacked beautiful dimes. Everytime. I'm talking about my own of course ha ha ha haaaah... So anyway, what I used to do is wrap a piece of cloth around the wire and hold it in place with a clothespin right before it entered the whip to clean the oil residue off.
You guys freaking rock! Some of the most beautiful MIG welding I've ever seen!
Thanks so much! They are great guys!
1981... mig, tig, stick, just about everything in a weld shop, including some brazing... great tips, keep it up. My tip: puddle control is everything.
Thankyou for taking the time and precisely shown how to lay the bead to get that effect. 👍
Glad it was helpful!
New to your channel and great looking welds from a novice welder for over 50 years.
Started with gas in HS and have gas, mig and still want a tig, buy it is another investment, and my age, it's hard to justify, but still looking for a good deal. I'm not cheap, I'm thifty.
I’ve been steadily welding for 8 years now and still can’t stack em as perfect as those guys. But then again I never tried .030. I’m going to give it a go now.
It’s definitely a major key! Thanks for the comment. Have a great day!
What kind of welding machine are you using?
GREAT VID, THANKS FOR THE CLEAR EXPLANATION OF THE WELD PATTERNS
One thing I got to say for young guys starting out in this kinda career. Use proper eye protection when grinding and welding ! No matter how uncomfortable you feel or silly your colleagues think you look remember you only get 1 pair of eyes , look after them !
Absolutely.
I'd add ear protection too...being around fabbing and welding pipe and construction in general for several decades (plus dozens of rock concerts over my lifetime), my ears are SHOT!!! The ringing is so loud, I can't believe my next door neighbor can't hear it! Another one to take care of is your lungs...try to not breathe too much welding smoke. I've learned these lessons the hard way, because I didn't listen to the old timers when they told me to protect my ears, eyes, lungs, back, knees, etc...my eyes were the only thing that made it out relatively unscathed, although I have had metal and other debris dug out of them a few times. Fun shit.
This should go with out saying.
This should go with out saying.
This is the most helpful welding video I’ve watched yet. Clear instruction and great video quality.
Liked and subscribed - Thank you -
Videos like this remind me to keep practicing. A hobby, not my bread and butter, but reminds me how much I'm lacking. Thanks for the info, dudes!
Little practice everyday will completely change the game! Keep up the good work man!
I had some folks poke fun when I did this technique when I put my racecar together calling it "figging" (Fake tigging) and said the welds weren't as strong bla bla bla..... I have welded cages, and floor plates, motor plates, exhaust and structural components like this with no failures. The heat penetration is good and the welds are clean! Glad to see someone else do it. Looks awesome guys!
Your an amateur, right?
In high school, we had ‘trades’ studies. We had welding, automotive, machining, carpentry, electronics and graphic design. At the time, 1984-1986, it was pretty progressive. I entered welding. I’d done some fabrication at the time and thought ‘easy’. It was harder than anything I imagined. After high school, I entered the military (Combat Engineering) and started learning demolition. I ended up with two broken legs, fractured ribs and a concussion, all because I thought I knew more than my instructors. I went to work with a company cleaning up oil spills, chemical spills, fires, anything that was ‘ethyl-methyl-bad-shit-fucked-up’. No welding. Got tired with that, became a truck driver. No welding. I THEN became a police officer (my father-in-law, a police officer, wouldn’t let his daughter marry a truck driver). No welding. Now, I’m retired and want to weld. I appreciate the ‘tips-&-tricks’. After 30+ years the machines, techniques, technology, gases, rods, EVERYTHING, is different. And, I’m watching ‘kids’ welding soda cans together, thinking, ‘the fffffffffffffffffuuuuuuuuu am I watching’. Laying beads that make me sick. Anyways, keep em coming.
You choose your life. Don't let anyone else make decisions for your own life.
I recommend going to welding tips and tricks on here. Jody is a very good teacher.
Practice practice practice and you will achieve
Really helpful.. and THANKYOU for not adding loud deathcore music
Those are the same exact techniques I use. With the "cursive e" technique I like to run the machine a little hot to maintain penetration, because I am moving the puddle around a bit more. Great video.
Same id be running like 22 or 23 volts but moving alot faster and like 250-260ipm wire speed
You're probably naturally more artistic then most of us.
I would recommend that people who struggle with consistency be taught the whip he showed first its the fastest way to quality welds for those of us that have no natural talent.
The other one that's like the Es but simpler is a back slash motion advancing the bottom first each time.
It's kind of the best parts of both techniques combined.
Think of it like the Es if they had no loops.
Cool. Something new to learn. I worked mostly in the aerospace industry as a repairer, mechanic, and MRO sheet metal fabricator. I now learning to MIG weld. Its great! TIG, machinist, and auto-cad are next on my list.
Wow, that is clean, look hands down, this is the best welding video I have watched on Mig welding period. Great Job Guys!
Thanks so much!
The day I manage to make welds as beautiful as yours, it will fall from the frogs of the sky. Your welds are art.
Awesome work Brad!!
The boys down at overkill are absolutely killing it! I believe quality isn't expensive its priceless. Keep up the work brother, I'm loving the videos
Thanks so much for watching man! I really appreciate it. Was such a cool experience! Quality is priceless 👊🏻
You guys can't possibly be human... Just HOLY CRAP ! I'm speechless!!
🙂🙂🙃🙃😄😄😄
Looks good. I use that technique for aluminum but I dont short arc. Pulsed spray on everything because of lack of fusion issues. And I dont use the little ass wire because I hate moving that slow jump to .045 on steel and 3/64" on Aluminum. Thats what I use on standard pulse or I can switch to Profile Pulse and you can adjust the frequency, arc length of the pulse and how much wire the feeder will push. Basically you can push a stringer with no manipulation to achieve the same effect. Referring to a Miller XMT 350 MPa with S-74 MPa plus feeder
This actually just meant the world to me for information. Im just getting into welding and will be picking up a Lincoln Electric 88 amp Handy Mig welder. So finding this before ive even started, gives me the basis of what i should be starting of doing, and how i can eventually make gorgeous welds. I will def be subbing and watching more, thank you so much!
Heck yeah! Thanks for the comment and keep at it! Goodluck 🙌🏻👊🏻
Hi,This is 🔥Kimchi Welder🔥 who is uploading a welding video in Canada. Your MIG welding is really great, I look forward to the next video.😎😎😎😎
Joel. Your attention to detail always shows and it was great you joined the diesel bros.
This is for all the kids in school. just wanted to inform y’all that if you have to code weld NEVER EVER do this. The technique used is a whip and that can actually fail you on an X Ray because it pushes imperfections from the front of the puddle into the weld which can lead to porosity below the surface. If it’s non code welding you’re fine to use it tho
Amen to that. I have been a CWI for AWS D1.1 structural code for 23 years. I truly don't mean to offend, but this technique is NOT correct for what I inspect. It would be a huge problem for sure.
@@wedgehead63 so for structural you inspect GMAW? Please explain
Ummm dude never claimed structural welding pass. These are automotive suspension pieces. I'm sure they're plenty strong.
If you want your weld to look like a Tig weld use a Tig, dur. If you want a poor quality mig weld do this
Agree. Why not clean the faces and degrease before tacking? Nice looking welds though
makes me want to weld stuff again.. awh just drawing circles and trusting the circles, what you call rinse and repeat. it's just been so long since i welded.
welding is so meditative.
Lots of perfect welders apparently. I personally need to learn. Solid info. I went with .035 for my first spool because...perhaps I should change out. .035 needs heat and penetration else it builds way too quick. If I start weave pattrerns with .035, I'm building ugly piles of filler. Problem is, average steel thicknesses I'm working with don't like that much heat. Anyway, time to practice, thanks fellas!!! I'm subbed for sure.
The wire speed and voltage he has set for this type of welding would work alright with .035, but it is similar to what I used for 3G applications on .045. The .035 would probably want to be pushed closer to 20V with the similar wire speed. I used to do a half moon style whip when I did flat or horizontal welding, of course, I haven't been doing it professionally for almost 5 years now, so that process may have changed for me by now if I were still doing it. If I were doing similar to what he did (hydraulic tanks makes me think of this same setup) I would have done a forward-back weave to maintain the penetration for it. Like others have said, though, practice makes perfect, and I was nowhere near perfect after 13 years lol!
You guys are the baddest in the world.
Amazing work, you're the best welder I can see in long time (sorry I don't know speak English).
Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience with us.
Few years back I was practicing this method and it's allot of practice, but once u get it, steady hands, GREAT VIDEO!!!
Wow! what beautiful welding. Also a great tutorial. Straight to the point with all the info one needs to weld great. No drawn out video full of bs. Just a perfect job, as far as Im concerned. I cant wait to see more
Yes agreed, too many TH-camrs try to emulate the traditional tv show format with lots of talking in front of the camera, and setups and jokes, and tomfoolery, and side stories. That’s great sometimes but more often I just want to learn about something specific or learn something I never knew existed.
i really like the semi-slo motion shots as you are drawing on the table too. was trying to figure out what the difference between .30 and .35 and stumble on this vid and im glad i clicked on it
Great info!! My welding has never looked super pretty but I've never had anything let go. I'll be welding a lot soon so I'll be incorporating your methods. Thanks!!
No makeup needed with a grinder nice looking welds for cosmetics depending upon the application to get maximum penetration the welds won’t be as pretty but they would be stronger and yes they do look like TIG welds great video. Not all welds have to be prone to an X-ray Criteria unless it’s total structural like a pipe liner welder or spot on your welds are simply beautiful and strong enough for most applications great job guys I’ve been welding for over 40 years stick mig tig hydrogen oxy ac was certified now I just tell people what to do as I spent my time in the trenches I can tell you from experience work smarter not harder or you’ll ruin your body
It looks to me like your welding a little cool at 18 volts on 1/4 plate, but I think that’s part of why it’s stacking so pretty.
I agree
Depends on the machine
Trying to learn about welding here. So can you explain what you saw that indicated that?
@@shimarlie1 you will learn the heat of electrode to the thickness of plate. so if thickness of plate is x then heat of electrode should be around y-z y-z being a variable so lets just say for instance 110-130 amps.
@@shimarlie1 to me there welding to cold at 18 volts. So to help, they’ve slowed there wire speed down. So it’s giving a really pretty stack of dimes (or tig) look. But if you go off a Miller or Lincoln voltage chart your you’d want to be closer to 21 volts. Unless your using straight CO2. But this overkillracing guy is a better welder then me. But he’s using so much filler in that joint he’s going to get a lot of strength out of that weld. But at 18 volts on any machine your going to get a proud weld.
humble and humbler! these guys are awesome. thanks for the tips fellas. 🙏
Aesthetics are important when making custom parts for someone's car or other automotive project. Will it pass and xray. Nope. But it looks perty and it will be strong enough for it's intended purpose.
The angle they had the gun in some of this video would guarantee they have slag inclusion.
🤦 never fails… always someone in the comments that has to throw in their two cents about “slag inclusion” and welds “not passing inspection.” So fucking annoying.. does it look good? Does it hold? Yes then who gives a fuck about inspections and X-rays
@@robbie35able says the guys who doesn’t weld for a living.
@@Real.Alpheus that’s exactly what I do for a living. Not everything is production welding that needs to be tested. There is custom fabrication which is what I do where you don’t have some fat inspector walking around telling you how to weld
Very NICE! that is one of the most pristine welds I have ever seen!! AWESOME!
I had to laugh at the whip and pause method, simply because that's how I was taught to run 6010! Lol.
WOW...EXCELLENT BEADS...GREAT SKILL & INFO THANKS
Beautiful work. People need to remember though that with all the settings right, and the material prep right, you still need to have the hands for this. Practice practice practice. 10,000 hours. But yeah, .030 makes life easier on this application for sure. Still, seems to slow the process way down. I would probably lean towards just using a TIG. However, if you can MIG like that you will be impressing people at the show and shine.
this is way faster cheaper and lower skill than tig. this is hack shit, honestly.
10,000 hours. LMAO. dude that is over a YEAR of arc time. come the fuck on man. if you welded for 8 hours a day, never stopping to change bottles, wire, fit up nothing. just straight welding 8 hours a day. 7 days a week. 52 weeks a year 10k hours is 3.5 years. This technique can be learned and mastered in 2 weeks, tops. Ive taught hundreds of kids to weld like this in our shop over the years. Stacking dimes with a mig is a parlor trick, not some trophy of mastery.
@@DieselRamcharger you are correct Sir. Its more about footage of weld but still keeping quality top notch. In my experience with aluminum at least 300 feet a day is a norm if conditions permit.
@@DieselRamcharger depends on penetration needed too. Tig gives a ton of control. I wouldnt say mig is quicker but it definitely is easier.
@@Sak-zo1ui mig is undeniably faster. which is why tig has the highest cost per inch. because its slow.
I've watched this video 5 times I revisit to refresh thanks guys for putting this together
Damn dude as a completely untrained rookie this is some inspiring work 👍
I'm new to welding I'm pretty good so far but I have alot to learn. That's for the video.
Fantastic! thank`s man for this tutorial!
Appreciate you watching! Have a great weekend.
Its like trying to get to Carnegie Hall .........................Practice Practice Practice !
Wonderful welds Gentlemen !
Honestly, the best welding video on youtube!
This is the best explanation I've seen. I've been away from my welding for awhile and this brought it all back. Thank you guys.
I’m new to welding and I’m starting with smaw welder. Is it possible to stack dimes with my style of welding machine or is it a straight bead? I’m intending to do chassis and exhaust with this setup
Oh My it takes a long time to be an Artist like him ❤ ♾️ 👌🙏👍👏👏👏
Great camera work and editing. Super content as always. I thought You gave up on the TH-cam chanel. Keep it up.
Thanks so much for the support and watching this video. Means a lot! Have a great day!
Awesome WORKMANSHIP
MIG like TIG? Never heard of her...LOL. GREAT job and explanation on the technique and the video guys!
You’re the OG of Mig like a Tig. We still need to come out and see you! 🙌🏻
pfft, you kill it!!
Looks like method I used to use often where I ran the wire speed low to the point of where it looks like a TIG torch. I called it TIG - MIG
Dude at the end said it best; what works for the other guy, may not work best for you. You can get a rough guesstimate from your buddy whos a golden arm, but you'll have to fine tune your machine that fits you best! Practice, practice, practice...💪🤘🇺🇸
Great video and I appreciate all the effort put into it! Been following the guys over at Overkill for quite some time and it's great to see them in a video demonstrating their mad skills! Just a quick question...what CFH do they find themselves running their 75/25 indoors? Thanks!
This tip did help me. Simple and to the point. Thank you guys!
Interesting to see a cross section of how much peno you get
@Jessica Rupert with smaller diameter wire you get better penetration
So I'm in P-Tech (College Corse) in High school and I thought this was a Normal weld but I guess it just came to me naturally. I think I had it perfected around my 4th day of starting with the cursive E type method.
NICE LOOKING DIMES!!!
Big fan Steve!
Looks like shit with a lack of penetration. No real application
Great explanation! You deserve every one of the 1.5mm views! +1 subscriber
Looks pretty but I'd be interested in seeing how it performs in coding tests.
What's a coding test? Is that like when they x-ray the weld?
@@Michael_00001 not necessarily An x Ray but yes. A test designed to test the strength and penetration of a weld.
I was watching with my husband and you were making an inter cooler, before you added the fittings, it was beautiful. I could put that out on a table. Loved it.
Could anything be more perfect than a welder named Rod?
How about Rod Miller or Rod Lincoln or Rod Lincoln-Miller III
I learned this technique from one of the ancients about 10 years ago. No one has been able to figure out how I do it since lol. I call my pattern more the ‘cursive J’ and I push the wire back into the puddle instead of pushing the wire forward essentially ‘pulling’ the gun I guess... My welds turn out stellar 98% of the time and haven’t had a single one break yet. Great video though fellas!
It's a shit technique if the intent is to lay down some welds that have good penetration and structural integrity. This "stacking dimes" nonsense would never pass code or an etch test.
I would teach this at my work. Guys never passed the test until they went over the top. But I used similar ratio speed and heat settings as Rod and always got asked why I weld the way I do lol
Thanks heaps guy's. I really appreciate. I just could never put it all together with MIG /TIG.....no matter how much i tried......Im a first class arc /fusion / braze. / oxy....fabricater.☺
If you learned running 6010 rod then you should have no problem working the puddle with mig.