he is ok but just ok he is he is pulling the gun thats wrong you push a mig it keeps the gas on the ark pulling it allows the gas to go everywere other than the ark if he pushed his gun his welds would look like a robot did it
If you gave him one of his early machines I bet he’d get the results he was talking about. These new welders are quite a bit more forgiving than the old basics .... I’m finding my new welder just welds better under so many conditions. Also he’s probably learned cleaning since he started and like me has discovered how that improves the resulting welds . He’s good and thorough ...
Mig makes welding like a walk in the park. Try 7018 stick. I cut my teeth hands on 30 years ago. These new mig welders are great. $300, no gas, welding 1/2 steel. Comfortable and in position is a must, a must. Hey Juan Perez, Charlie Brown.
@@chrisroberts6043 Im welding with the most basic AC welder and 6013 DC electrodes, because those are the only only ones I can buy locally. Im nailing it for some reason tho.....
@@virtuerse yes. It is hard to see in real time. I use a shade 10 to weld mig which is pretty much standard and it’s hard to see everything that’s going on. It really just comes with practice, you have to keep your eye on everything about the weld, the pool, the arc length, the stick out, the work angle, the travel angle, the surroundings so you know where you are and that you’re moving in a straight line( that’s what I have the most problems with), etc and you can only really learn how it’s supposed to look with practice. Watching a video really doesn’t do a justice what all goes into being a good welder. And that’s just visual stuff. You also have to keep the pattern you weld consistent, the travel speed has to be correct and consistent. Not to mention prep work, making sure your metal is clean, your mig gun too, setting the gas, wire feed speed, and voltage correctly. There are so many variables that go into welding and they all change based on other variables like what metal you’re welding, the environment you’re welding in, the position you’re welding, etc. You can learn all of it with time and I’m probably making it sound harder than it is. It really just takes practice.
@@luvmechanix yup - i'm really thankful for these videos and I know they'll be 10x as valuable to come back and refer to after i've got a good 10-15 hours of experience screwing up and identifying which kind of screw up I've been making. Doctors have a phrase "your google search is not commensurate to my experience" - I think it's always good to remember with anything. You can become the most intelligent person on paper for something - know every theory and calculation in and out for what constitutes "perfection" for any given physical skill, but it's not worth much when you need to actually execute said skill without the same amount of real world experience performing it.
I've worked in the welding field off and on for the last 12 years. Went to college for welding and manufacturing technologies. Just for my own benefit I am taking a trade school course in welding. Plus, the additional certification will look good for my credentials. Our instructor uses this guy's videos all the time to reference proper welding methods. He's really talented and is considered a celebrity in the welding field. The instructor has met him and says the guy is really humble and doesn't consider himself to be anything close to a celebrity.... Well 12 million welders across the nation disagree with you sir. Your skills in our trade are definitely worth the celebrity status. 👍
Yes, he is such a good welder that his "bad techniques" looked so much better than that any newbie will see... 😂 Steady movement on your control hand is a learned trade. Excellent video & comments 👌
@@1gruntusmc some people are just naturally good at it. For example, In that course I took (cause this was a year ago) I was the oldest person in the class (and the only one that had practical experience welding on the job). The youngest person was a 17 year old girl. She had never welded before. Never picked up a torch. But she put down beads better most automated machines do. It didn't matter if it was SMAW, MIG or TIG. I had never seen such natural skills in welding before in my life. There are guys I've known that have been in the field for over 50 years and still weren't as good as this young lady was at welding.
A skill that will never become obsolete...I like watching a Master at work and then taking the time to teach, is just awesome....Thank you sir for doing this.
@@calikalbocalikalbo6082 this video might be ok as an intro but the guy starts out by dragging his weld. Any body with and weld knowledge knows to push
Jarred Gifford The code only specifies welding direction while doing vertical. Push or pull is a technique up to the welder. Having said that I prefer pushing.
I am a lightly experienced welder. Pretty sure any beginner welder with the equipment on this video would weld better. This is one of the best instructional video I’ve ever seen. To the point, not about a personality, really breaks it down fast. Wish all trade videos were this good.
I worked for Stemco, in Longview Texas, late 70's. Production welder...worked up to blacksmith in the muffler department. 28 gauge material. We stick welded the baffles into the muffler body, that were pressed together, baffles and tubes,then welded on an air clamp type rotor that turned as fast or slow as you wanted. As a blacksmith, we hand formed and mig welded the inlets and outlets to the muffler body.Your technique is as mine was. Thanks for the memories.
Hello there! I am looking into literature about weaving patterns in welding. I came across the term "torch weaving" and I've been trying to look it up on google and see what it is, sadly I still haven't figured it out. Do you happen to know what torch weaving is? I only have access to arc welding equipment so I'm not sure if this "torch weaving" is applicable.
I weld at work from time to time with a Miller mig. I've never been formally taught how, just "fake it till ya make it", so it's helpful to watch this video and see the difference all these elements make. It's also re-assuring to see that I'm on the right track. Thank you!
I went to this job site to apply for work, they said we need welders and asked me can I weld, I said yes. What kind they said, I said tig because that's the first word that came to mind, then he said show me and I thought fuck me it's over, but the wife calls me and says baby crying outside so I tell the guy I'll be back. Now I'm here trying to learn anything and everything I can so I don't look like an idiot when I go back there this Thursday.
And guess what ...that's a common occurrence .....ending up with people who call themselves welders ....and they have NEVER had any formal training. These guys were sometimes called "trailer welders" ....and when you think about it, if they really did weld "trailers" ....that would be a very dangerous trailer running down a highway with a load.
@@taxicamel I just bought a trailer from said "welder". I bought it for the material, axles, etc. After I tore off the sheet metal on top...every single weld will have to be re done. Thank God it's just a single axle trailer and I bought it vs somebody else. Dunno if this guy just spray and prayed or what or had an underpowered unit or what. I'm thinking 100 series mig with flux core and he spray and prayed.
I am a beginning hobby welder and I certainly appreciate the clear explanations of the variables that contribute to the quality of the welds. The clear video examples help a lot.
One of the best weld tutorials on you tube. Anyone that is starting out or just not getting it. I refer them to here. The videos alone are give a better view than trying to cram 2 people in a booth or other awkward positions. And explanations are first rate. 👍👍👍👍
An excellent video ... really useful information. My Father was a Welder (since WWII). I either had to learn to weld or leave home. I'm 67 now and he remained my Mentor, Teacher and Hero. He passed away at 96 on Sept. 7th, 2019. Still rock-steady, still proud of his profession and always the "eternal student" of his craft. Didn't wear glasses to read or drive (which pissed me off). Thank you, Bob, for working to keep this kind of workmanship alive.
My dad owned a structural steel fabrication business and I grew up welding from the time I could hold an electrode stick. I appreciate the way you teach and it reminds me of good ol' dad "the man of steel" may he rest. Especially the term "dingle berries" lol. Thanks for the great memories of my past. God bless.
Dan the Man,,,, I know right. My dad (RIP) was the same way. One thing he showed me also is not to weld barefoot. I remember that one day he asked me to help him hold something as he welded it.... Man it got me good.
I could listen to this fella all day long, about anything. His narration of what he's doing, and the fact that he called out exactly what was gonna happen, is weirdly soothing. Like if I was laying down some crap beads, he wouldn't scream at me like a madman, he strikes me as the type that helps out with constructive criticism
Excellent video. As a novice welder I learned more by watching this video about 'bad' welding techniques (or rather common mistakes) than from other videos about 'good' welding techniques. Keep up the good work!
Finally, some simple clear demonstrations on how to identify the different outcomes of incorrect settings. As someone who last welded 25 years ago in high school and is trying to get back into learning this really helps understand the volt/wire speed relationship a bit more. Clean metal is a given but great video demonstration.
I am a local 46 Ironworker this guy is one of the best I have seen!! He is a great welder / teacher because he is sharing his knowledge not trying to convince anybody how good he is.
The best way to learn is from your mistakes. It's how you learned to walk. By showing the most common mistakes and the results, you've shortened my learning curve. As a new welder, my welds are much better because of your video. Thanks you.
Thank you for teaching us the basics. You explained things in a fundamental manner that makes sense to someone like me that wants to learn the art of welding. Thanks again.
Honest to God, this is one of the most useful videos that I have ever seen on welding. I am a backyard hobbyist who knows 2 excellent and highly credentialled welders. That doesn't make me anything but not as good as them by a long shot. They tell me this, and help me with that, and I am getting better. But this video tells me what they were really trying to tell me. My welds are better because of this video. Thanks! I don't wanna suck at anything that I do. Mucho Gracias for the help. (Yes, I subscribed a few months ago)
you are a life saver!!!!! I'm at an OJT for a factory and was trailing the class because i did not know what i was looking for. thanks, you're a life saver!!!
10 years of being an automotive tech. ASE master tech certified, and I have 0 training in welding. I learned to do what I can do by watching and listening to the older more experienced mechanics when they weld. I practiced on my own free time and played with the wire feed and voltage settings until I could replicate the look/sound of the welds they did. Today I was trying to weld repair an exhaust on one of our Ram trucks somebody tired to steal the cats off of one night.... I played around with the wire feed and voltage settings for half an hour and I just couldn't get it right. I was getting very frustrated that I couldn't get my welds to come out right, and after a half an hour of trying different things, and thinking I was doing something wrong, thats when I decided to check the gas.... Sure enough the whole time I was messing with the voltage, and the wire speed, trying to get the right settings to get a good weld, and the damn argon tank was empty.... I decided, altho I haven't had any formal training in welding, I'm very willing to learn, and your video I found to be a great help.... Now I can see the common mistakes and what they look/sound like. I have a better idea of what needs corrected with my welds. I"ll watch your video a few times over until I got it in my head. And of course watch a few more. But I hope to learn what and how needs to change with my welding to make it better. Rather than continuing on like I have in the past and just playing around and practicing until I can replicate what the pro's do. In short I want to be able to tell whats wrong with my welds right away and fix it, rather than just keep messing around until I get it right and go with that. I think videos like this will help me get there. Thank you!
I've made the mistake plenty of times of forgetting to turn the tank on and attempting to weld lol I always find a piece of scrap metal to weld on right before I do a project to ensure that I have all the settings right
Once you find out the common mistakes you identify them pretty quickly. No or low gas often sounds like the weld is hissing. The sizzling bacon sound turns more into a muffled hissing which is the weld literally burning in the oxygen from the air. The sounds reveal jus as much as the looks. Even no argon has it's own district sound.
Welding in automotive is totally different then industrial Welding. You'll stay in uncomfortable positions, shot crappie metal under 1 mm thickness, rust, paint, zinc in places where you can't really and properly clean. There's not right way or wrong way when Welding on cars. Most of the time I use point or two steps Welding.
When I was welding daily I did pretty good but I still didn't really know what I was doing. When I would go months without welding my welds looked like bird do do at 10,000 feet. A lot of the mistakes you have identified will make me go about welding more methodically in the future. This was a great lesson for me. I loved your video and I will refer to it before I start to weld anything in the future. Thank you.
This is I find very helpful. I'm getting industry education in my country, and we been welding or using lathe on every Wednesday for a year, but only problem is that we don't got a welding teacher, so I am about to have an exam where I can get welding tasks without actually knowing how to weld properly.
Thank you for the video. I’ve watched lots of weld videos and yours are the simplest and clearest with demonstrations that are spot on. I really like you doing part of the weld correctly then part of the weld incorrectly as it shows me a direct comparison without having to pause the video to look at the good weld, or go back to the good weld in the video to compare.
Masterclass in gas shield electric welding by a teacher with obvious skill and experience. Thank you sir, you may inspire so many to take up a more useful, peaceable gun.
Wrong way totally bogus this guy is not teaching proper welding methods and this video shows you do not pull a gas fed Mig you push it and if he is AWS certified? In Gas fed Mig he would have had to push weld or he would have Failed the certified test.
I see a lot of welding videos but they either talk too much or are not really expert welders at all. This man is fantastic explains very well and demonstrates both the bad weld and the good weld so one can really see the difference. Well done sir and thank you.
Here is a playlist to jump from mistake to mistake: 0:48 What you should see/hear 1:20 Rusted surface 2:42 Volts too high 3:24 Volts too low 4:10 WFS too high 4:43 WFS stupid low 5:07 WFS too low 6:31 Proper stickout 6:43 Stickout too long 8:18 Proper stickout 8:26 Stickout too short 10:13 Gas too high 10:45 Gas too low 11:46 Proper travel speed 11:56 Travel speed too fast 12:27 Proper travel speed 12:38 Travel speed too slow 14:18 Proper gun angle 14:29 Too much drag angle 14:55 Proper gun angle 15:05 Too much push angle You're welcome!
I am starting up welding next week, i am looking around for specific do's and dont's. I know that usually comes with practice and doing it, but I want to get a general understanding of how to do it right. Thank you for this video has already helped me get an idea of what to expect.
I've just found this video and its been probably the best video out there for helping newbies to learn... I've never attempted to weld in my life (I'm 54 years young!) but I brought a Clarke 135TE MIG welder because I want to learn and I have a car that needs a fair amount of welding. I dont want to pay someone else to do the work when I can learn myself! Yes I know it can all go horribly wrong but then again that's on me so please nobody tell me I'm an idiot :-). I have been practising on thin sheet mild steel for a little while now and am brave enough after trying the recommendations from this video to try welding the rear shock towers on my 22 year old Mercedes SLK 320 project car. I will record it and put the videos up on my TH-cam channel so people can either see that if I can make a passable job of it then they can try OR that Its almost impossible and without extensive practise and learning, get a professional in lol. For those interested, I will be attempting to weld it as soon as the weather is good to me here in the UK and I can coordinate with my partners son so I have someone with me to make sure I dont set fire to the inside of the boot (trunk for you American guys and girls 🙂). Wish me luck and im ready when the weather improves as I have to weld outside on my driveway, its now 2nd April 2022 and I aim to have a video up within a couple of weeks god willing 🙂 Apologise for hijacking your video Weld.com, that's certainly not my intension, my main point in all this is that you have given me the confidence to at least try even if it all goes wrong after my practising. Thank you..... Aspie Geek UK
Your presentation, as an educator, is spot on! Your knowledge of the subject matter comes through loud and clear! This is an excellent video, especially for the serious minded individual who seeks to become more than competent in MIG welding. I am thrilled to find such high quality on a subject that presently interests me! Thank you very much...well done!
I have a little experience with welding and my welds look similar to his good welds. Once you get the hang of it and get good at it, it becomes kinda addicting and you'll want to weld everything together... At least I did.
There's a lot of different kinds of jobs welding you could be stick welding on a sheet metal roofs, MiG welding in a shop, TIG welding stainless steel pipe in a refinery, or be a rig welder doing everything yourself. Pay can very a lot to you could make minimum wage but I've seen rig welds make (no joke) 4,000 a week and they were the laziest people I have ever worked with.
Wow this video is great. A person could learn how to MIG solely with these tips. I just got MIG after using stick only for a couple years and I feel like I'll be back here at some point! Thank you so much.
Hey man, i'm learning a little bit of welding for my automotive class, and i'm awful at it lol. This video made me see what i'm doing wrong. My major problem is distance and speed, and it's more with stick welding because we've just started with mig, but i'm able to see in detail what i've been doing wrong. My teacher uses a lot of your videos for our class, and they're great. Thanks for putting this out there.
As a beginner ti MIG welding (since I inherited a machine), I found this video very informative and will be putting into practice what I have learned. Thanks very much!
@@mathieufredette3157 I'm not even a beginner yet - welder is due to arrive today! Yipee! It is said that If there's slag you drag. MIG means Metal In Gas but gasless MIG as a description makes no sense. There is a gas in the flux I guess but there is also some slag so I would assume, push with gas, drag with gasless. Is that a fair comment?
finally a good tutorial! i used to buy my 125$ welder and now i had to weld two pieces of metal, saw this tutorial and put everything like him, PERFECT WELD LINE. i said everything.
This is a very informative and well-presented instructional. There were a few more points you could have made, such as when your travel speed was too slow, the weld penetration was hugely increased, you can just about see it when you turned the parent metal over and used the other side. Also, the too much gas produced a colder weld. or at least it certainly looks like it. I'll be recommending this as a video to watch whenever anyone asks me "so, how do I used this welder then?". It covers all the basics, and if followed properly should have even a novice laying down some decent weld beads. Or at least knowing what was wrong with them. The calm, smooth delivery of your information was possibly matched only by the calm, smooth delivery of your welds :) Subbed.
I appreciate the time you guys have spent putting this together for us! Extremely vivid examples of what to look for while I'm practicing on my own. You have earned a subscriber & a fan! Thank you!
Same. But one thing I have noticed in life, is knowledge isn't wasted. You may not know how to weld, but learning the differences in what the material looks like in a "good" form and in all the "bad" forms, means that when you look at a weld on something you own, are thinking about buying, or are inspecting, you now have a basic knowledge to make informed opinions on it.
@Paul Bee If you watched a video on that, you made that choice. TH-cam didn't force you to watch that, but something you had watched in the past created a path to allow TH-cam to recommend it to you.
I've gone thru about 40 lbs of wire now, watched lots of videos, and they make it look easy - it's not. When welding in the real world on a project these are my biggest problems: 1) getting in a comfortable position 2) cleaning the metal and getting a good ground 3) being able to see what I'm doing 4) burning the shit out of my hands, feet and sneakers because I fail to wear proper clothing. My best welds are on tiny ass squares of steel that are laying perfectly flat - and they are typically not as good as his. I like this video - and I will continue to have hope.
Dude I love this. I mean I weld a lot, I have for years. But here’s the thing. Getting really refined and good takes coming back to the basics and being aware after the awareness falls off. It’s refinement.
I've got to say, your skill is evident in the fact that you had a hard time getting "bad results"! A newbie will be HAPPY to see your lackluster welds as their final product 😂 Excellent video instruction!
He is a good speaker, gets the info across with minimum noise, and good video presentation that mattches the message, wish more presenters were this skillful, he seems as if he would have been or perhaps is, a vo- tech instructor.👌👍🔥
My dad was a good welder. When I was a young teen he decided he would teach me the art. The lesson lasted about ten minutes and ended with Dad saying “Stick with comedy son, you ain’t no welder”.
It took me 25 years of shitty welding to discover that I just can't see out of my hood. "Dab the rod in the puddle" WTF is the puddle the yellow glowy part?
What a great video! Thank you for the well thought out video, and identifying common problem areas. A lot of people make welding videos, but very few make videos like this that identify common mistakes. Great job!
90% of all the welding i've done was done repairing my car's rust damages. I hate mig-welding thin material such as floor panels/skirts but it's great practise.
man i love these videos... being a beginner and learning on my own, these videos make my life much more enjoyable knowing what i'm looking to do and not do.
really like your video i bought a gasless mig welder yesterday and i am going to teach myself how to mig weld i learn alot from your video as a beginner thanks
I have never welded in my life but I will be starting very soon and I know I'm going to be coming back to this video and if your other videos are of the same quality then I know I'll be using this channel a lot thank you so much
I just had my intake today, I'm hoping to get selected for the next welding class in my area. I am so excited to learn. And this video was great. Thanks for the info
You should think about getting you're own set welding really is something you can self teach with just a little bit of determination and persistence you could learn how to run a nice tidy bead straight away. I work in steel fabrication and when i started i was just a laborer (i grafted my bullocks off on the bandsaw/mag drills / the mill and the 2 ops for 12 hours a day 6 days a week) after about 2 months of working hard they decided to try let me learn welding as i seemed to grasp the idea everything else quickly (not welding though😂) after 2 days practice i was getting a nice consistency to my welds one thing i think of and it kinda helps me stay on track is if i start good and keep going the same all the way to the end i will have a nice consistent weld through and through it is no good double guessing yourself because when i have i kind of froze and would forget exactly where i am so basically its just knowing what you are going to do before you do it and then go ahead and execute it. ive now been a welder for 3 years and i am still learning now there is always more to learn.
I am a self taught welding and I was making rings for hand drums out of 1/4 cold rolled steel. I have always considered myself a much better grinder then a welder. lol. Thanks for the tips. Over the years my welding did get better.
Hello there! I am looking into literature about weaving patterns in welding. I came across the term "torch weaving" and I've been trying to look it up on google and see what it is, sadly I still haven't figured it out. Do you happen to know what torch weaving is? I only have access to arc welding equipment so I'm not sure if this "torch weaving" is applicable.
Touch welding is just that, using a oxy / acetylene set up with a welding tip on your touch (with one hole) rather than a cutting tip ( with multiple holes) and a fillerwelding. In my 30 years of experience I've never heard the turm "touch weaving" but it would have to be just weaving the touch and rod as to produce a wider weld.
Frustrating, isn’t it? He really has a hard time getting this to not come out right. We all wish we had that problem. I try to get bad welds. In that way I’m much better than Bob, because I succeed better than he does at that.
Ty for the help I’m trying to remember proper technique it’s been years that have not welded and new job will require it on a cation Ty again just subbed for more 👍
This is a perfect instructional video. Your information is so helpful and so well presented that I could watch hours of this... and I really mean that. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience. I look forward to applying what I have learned here when my very FIRST MIG welder arrives in the days to come! What could possibly go wrong? :) Please keep up the great work.
Thank you for such a great tutorial video. One for the favorite files! I’m new to mig welding and this video has been very helpful to me in my new hobby. Thumbs way up!! 🙏👍
That was probably without doubt, one of the coolest, most straight forward, and informative to the Max videos, I have EVER seen on YT. Bloody awesome work mate, fair dinkum, you’re like the rainman of welding. Noice going 🤙🤙🤙🤙🤙🤙
I worked as a machinist for many years. I would often hangout in the weld shop during lunch and mess around. After watching this video, I noticed I was an expert at doing it wrong lol.
At the age of 75 I have always admired the art of welding probably the one thing in my life that I would have loved to have done but never learnt thi guy is an excellent tutor
Don't we all. The biggest shame is that we only live once. I wish I had infinite do-overs to keep experimenting and learning and getting it wrong, and right, and wrong, and right again.
I'm 46 years old and just started a new career in welding and fabrication. This video was the best thing I could have watched regarding my life @ work right now. Thanks so much for your professional advice and insight. \○○/
What Miles said! Also, buy an Everlast, too! Make sure both are Multi-Process with all 3 polarities. Get plenty of welding consumables that which you can afford (E.G.: Welding Electrode Sticks and Electrode Holder, TIG Consumables, MIG Wire, FCAW Wire, Dual-Shield Wire, welding books along with fab books, and plenty of metal to practice on). Don't forget, welding safety is extremely important, too, so get a welding jacket, a fire resistant button-up shirt, a fire resistant long-sleeve T to go under the button-up shirt and welding jacket top layers, some good fire resistant pants, and some nice steel-toed boots. Get to welding, bud!!
Darn TH-cam algorithms! ;) In my case I love to see others explain common mistakes and configurations. As a welder I'm a good grinder. Really nice video. That guy is a hell of a welder!
As a welder of 7 years now (not straight in a row, and unticketed), I have a few questions. 1. I was taught MIG is a push, flux core/stick is pull. Is this not right? I just watched you pulling a MIG weld...which i was taught is supposed to be a push angle...or is it one of those "situational" type uses, where based on what you're aiming for the outcome of the weld, is what determines how one lays down the weld? 2. When it comes to voltage/WFS, I've always tended to aim for a setting where the point of contact, turns into a tiny electrical votex surrounding the wire. Doesn't have a popping type sound, but a somewhat hum type sound. Is this just a type of welding (in regards to terminology, 'spray' welding for example), or have I been doing it wrong? 3. The place I work has the opinion "just weld it, it'll burn through the rust/paint." As a result, I've seen ALOT of that glass type stuff on alot of my welds. Doesn't that stuff develope inside the weld as well, causing weaknesses? I prefer to clean everything I weld (works alot better!) but...when one is told to "just weld it" and one is getting paid....ya either argue with someone that has no idea what a proper weld is (and doesn't care, apparently), or just do as one's told (which is very depressing...I like my weld being proper, for what I've been taught). PS. Alot of my welds are a cross between your 'proper' setting and your "too high heat' setting....but I'm also using a metal core .053 wire, which maybe makes the difference?
Same here...taught to push MIG...so gas shields ahead of weld. I have been told pulling with MIG will penetrate deeper. Ive pulled and had no issues also....
TheDarkLordsofHell Push for penetration. Pull for build up. Only an idiot would tell you to weld over rust or paint as it will contaminate the weld. Also if it is older paint it’s probably lead based.
My brother is a great welder and I've been trying to learn. Well teaching it just ends up with him doing it for me instead. So I figured out I'm on my own learning. I have been having trouble getting the machine in tune and figuring out if my settings were correct. Going nuts and have had every issue this guy shows. This video is perfect I am going to try this out tonight. Funny how his welds still look way better on bad settings. But I also have a harbor freight special so good be part of my issues
Was a welder for twenty five years .Talking from experience ,Make sure you get your set right before attempting to weld anything, Here is a useful tip from a man now long gone who learnt me how to weld. Your set should sound like bacon sizzling in a pan, he told me.Do that and you won't have no problems .And to be honest I didn't. Modern times my foreman used to ask me to give people applying for a job to give them a weld test.All I did was to alter the settings on the machine before they started welding ,Some didn't and would fail by not doing so and it would end up by what many welders call looked pigeon s**t. The ones that altered the setting on the machine before welding got the job.One more tip before I go fellas make sure you you get proper breathing apparatus that is about now and not when I used to weld . Because Industrial C.O.P.D. is set to send me to the grave earlier than I expected.
I’d like to know what the tip of your gun looks like after correct welds are done, like how much spatter should there be in the nozzle and on the contact tip.
To be a good welder is one thing, to be a good teacher is another. This guy is nothing less than excellent in both. Well done.
he is ok but just ok he is he is pulling the gun thats wrong you push a mig it keeps the gas on the ark pulling it allows the gas to go everywere other than the ark if he pushed his gun his welds would look like a robot did it
I'm terrible with mig been practicing tig. With mig I struggle with bead.. I can't find a good rhythm. This will help show me what to avoid.
Potpuno se slazem sa vama. Pozdrav iz Srbije
❤👍🏻👏🏻
This guy is such a good welder that he is struggling to make bad welds.
That’s very true. He would start throwing shit if he saw the crap I’ve been laying down with my new mig.
If you gave him one of his early machines I bet he’d get the results he was talking about. These new welders are quite a bit more forgiving than the old basics .... I’m finding my new welder just welds better under so many conditions. Also he’s probably learned cleaning since he started and like me has discovered how that improves the resulting welds . He’s good and thorough ...
Mig makes welding like a walk in the park. Try 7018 stick. I cut my teeth hands on 30 years ago. These new mig welders are great. $300, no gas, welding 1/2 steel. Comfortable and in position is a must, a must. Hey Juan Perez, Charlie Brown.
MyBlues, that's common for those of us that do it everyday for a living
@@chrisroberts6043
Im welding with the most basic AC welder and 6013 DC electrodes, because those are the only only ones I can buy locally.
Im nailing it for some reason tho.....
His deliberately "bad" welds are still better than any of my "good" welds.
man i feel you there lol
LMAO true here too!
really ? you can make a "nice" looking weld without penetration on a mig welder fairly easily.
Haa
thats true.@@mcgman8058
my welding has led me to be an excellent grinder
That's funny. ;) flap discs!
Me too! I found a great grinder!
😂👌🏽 i don't like grinders they scare but i prefeer gas wellding don't like mig or tig
My intense dislike of grinding has led me to be an excellent welder.
@ That's the correct answer.
As someone who has never welded and is about to learn on their own these videos are invaluable, thank you.
Don't expect your experience to resemble the camera views. Thats the whole problem
@@luvmechanix so you have to adjust after the process? You’re saying it’s hard to see in real time?
@@virtuerse yes. It is hard to see in real time. I use a shade 10 to weld mig which is pretty much standard and it’s hard to see everything that’s going on. It really just comes with practice, you have to keep your eye on everything about the weld, the pool, the arc length, the stick out, the work angle, the travel angle, the surroundings so you know where you are and that you’re moving in a straight line( that’s what I have the most problems with), etc and you can only really learn how it’s supposed to look with practice. Watching a video really doesn’t do a justice what all goes into being a good welder. And that’s just visual stuff. You also have to keep the pattern you weld consistent, the travel speed has to be correct and consistent. Not to mention prep work, making sure your metal is clean, your mig gun too, setting the gas, wire feed speed, and voltage correctly. There are so many variables that go into welding and they all change based on other variables like what metal you’re welding, the environment you’re welding in, the position you’re welding, etc. You can learn all of it with time and I’m probably making it sound harder than it is. It really just takes practice.
@@luvmechanix yup - i'm really thankful for these videos and I know they'll be 10x as valuable to come back and refer to after i've got a good 10-15 hours of experience screwing up and identifying which kind of screw up I've been making. Doctors have a phrase "your google search is not commensurate to my experience" - I think it's always good to remember with anything. You can become the most intelligent person on paper for something - know every theory and calculation in and out for what constitutes "perfection" for any given physical skill, but it's not worth much when you need to actually execute said skill without the same amount of real world experience performing it.
@@2000jago lmfaoao! I just started tig last week. You are 100% right
I'm not a welder, but this video has helped me identify what a good weld looks like and what common types of bad welds exist. Thank you!
Ye now i can talk shit on instagram XD
I've worked in the welding field off and on for the last 12 years. Went to college for welding and manufacturing technologies. Just for my own benefit I am taking a trade school course in welding. Plus, the additional certification will look good for my credentials. Our instructor uses this guy's videos all the time to reference proper welding methods. He's really talented and is considered a celebrity in the welding field. The instructor has met him and says the guy is really humble and doesn't consider himself to be anything close to a celebrity.... Well 12 million welders across the nation disagree with you sir. Your skills in our trade are definitely worth the celebrity status. 👍
And we have Liné and hi is the shit!!
Yes, he is such a good welder that his "bad techniques" looked so much better than that any newbie will see... 😂 Steady movement on your control hand is a learned trade. Excellent video & comments 👌
@@1gruntusmc some people are just naturally good at it. For example, In that course I took (cause this was a year ago) I was the oldest person in the class (and the only one that had practical experience welding on the job). The youngest person was a 17 year old girl. She had never welded before. Never picked up a torch. But she put down beads better most automated machines do. It didn't matter if it was SMAW, MIG or TIG. I had never seen such natural skills in welding before in my life. There are guys I've known that have been in the field for over 50 years and still weren't as good as this young lady was at welding.
@@1gruntusmc the videos helped give an example of what to do or what not to do. And they did help the other students.
@@1gruntusmc btw.... Semper Fi. Before I was a welder I served in the Corps as well. 2000 to 2008.
A skill that will never become obsolete...I like watching a Master at work and then taking the time to teach, is just awesome....Thank you sir for doing this.
Thank you for work your a good teacher
The trades will always be needed for mankind. Regardless of how much we advance. That is what I call job security.
If you like watching a master then stop watching this clown.
@@calikalbocalikalbo6082 this video might be ok as an intro but the guy starts out by dragging his weld. Any body with and weld knowledge knows to push
Jarred Gifford
The code only specifies welding direction while doing vertical. Push or pull is a technique up to the welder. Having said that I prefer pushing.
For us guys that do not weld everyday, this is a great video to check out prior to taking on a project as a refresher and practice session. Thank you!
thank u for this comment...i needed this👍
I am a lightly experienced welder. Pretty sure any beginner welder with the equipment on this video would weld better. This is one of the best instructional video I’ve ever seen. To the point, not about a personality, really breaks it down fast. Wish all trade videos were this good.
YOu can NOT golf par with Jack or Tiger's clubs. Do the work.
I want to hear this guy talk about propane and propane accessories.
Hahahaha
Shut up bobby 😂
Not forgetting "Pie a la mode"
Haha!
Dang it Bobby
I worked for Stemco, in Longview Texas, late 70's. Production welder...worked up to blacksmith in the muffler department. 28 gauge material. We stick welded the baffles into the muffler body, that were pressed together, baffles and tubes,then welded on an air clamp type rotor that turned as fast or slow as you wanted. As a blacksmith, we hand formed and mig welded the inlets and outlets to the muffler body.Your technique is as mine was. Thanks for the memories.
Hello there! I am looking into literature about weaving patterns in welding. I came across the term "torch weaving" and I've been trying to look it up on google and see what it is, sadly I still haven't figured it out. Do you happen to know what torch weaving is? I only have access to arc welding equipment so I'm not sure if this "torch weaving" is applicable.
I weld at work from time to time with a Miller mig. I've never been formally taught how, just "fake it till ya make it", so it's helpful to watch this video and see the difference all these elements make. It's also re-assuring to see that I'm on the right track. Thank you!
I went to this job site to apply for work, they said we need welders and asked me can I weld, I said yes. What kind they said, I said tig because that's the first word that came to mind, then he said show me and I thought fuck me it's over, but the wife calls me and says baby crying outside so I tell the guy I'll be back. Now I'm here trying to learn anything and everything I can so I don't look like an idiot when I go back there this Thursday.
@@javigonzalez7669 Haaa
And guess what ...that's a common occurrence .....ending up with people who call themselves welders ....and they have NEVER had any formal training. These guys were sometimes called "trailer welders" ....and when you think about it, if they really did weld "trailers" ....that would be a very dangerous trailer running down a highway with a load.
@@javigonzalez7669 how did it go...tig
@@taxicamel I just bought a trailer from said "welder". I bought it for the material, axles, etc. After I tore off the sheet metal on top...every single weld will have to be re done. Thank God it's just a single axle trailer and I bought it vs somebody else. Dunno if this guy just spray and prayed or what or had an underpowered unit or what. I'm thinking 100 series mig with flux core and he spray and prayed.
I am a beginning hobby welder and I certainly appreciate the clear explanations of the variables that contribute to the quality of the welds. The clear video examples help a lot.
One of the best weld tutorials on you tube.
Anyone that is starting out or just not getting it. I refer them to here.
The videos alone are give a better view than trying to cram 2 people in a booth or other awkward positions.
And explanations are first rate.
👍👍👍👍
An excellent video ... really useful information. My Father was a Welder (since WWII). I either had to learn to weld or leave home. I'm 67 now and he remained my Mentor, Teacher and Hero. He passed away at 96 on Sept. 7th, 2019. Still rock-steady, still proud of his profession and always the "eternal student" of his craft. Didn't wear glasses to read or drive (which pissed me off). Thank you, Bob, for working to keep this kind of workmanship alive.
as someone who just started welding i feel blessed to have insight from absolute pros like this gentleman, thanks so much to everyone involved
My dad owned a structural steel fabrication business and I grew up welding from the time I could hold an electrode stick. I appreciate the way you teach and it reminds me of good ol' dad "the man of steel" may he rest. Especially the term "dingle berries" lol. Thanks for the great memories of my past. God bless.
Dan the Man,,,, I know right. My dad (RIP) was the same way. One thing he showed me also is not to weld barefoot. I remember that one day he asked me to help him hold something as he welded it.... Man it got me good.
This guy is doing his best to mess it up for demonstration purposes and all of his beads keep coming out awesome 😳
this is one of the best instructional videos i have seen. clear audio, well explained, slow enough to get the points made.
I could listen to this fella all day long, about anything.
His narration of what he's doing, and the fact that he called out exactly what was gonna happen, is weirdly soothing. Like if I was laying down some crap beads, he wouldn't scream at me like a madman, he strikes me as the type that helps out with constructive criticism
Excellent video. As a novice welder I learned more by watching this video about 'bad' welding techniques (or rather common mistakes) than from other videos about 'good' welding techniques. Keep up the good work!
Finally, some simple clear demonstrations on how to identify the different outcomes of incorrect settings. As someone who last welded 25 years ago in high school and is trying to get back into learning this really helps understand the volt/wire speed relationship a bit more. Clean metal is a given but great video demonstration.
I am a local 46 Ironworker this guy is one of the best I have seen!! He is a great welder / teacher because he is sharing his knowledge not trying to convince anybody how good he is.
The best way to learn is from your mistakes. It's how you learned to walk. By showing the most common mistakes and the results, you've shortened my learning curve. As a new welder, my welds are much better because of your video. Thanks you.
Thank you for teaching us the basics. You explained things in a fundamental manner that makes sense to someone like me that wants to learn the art of welding. Thanks again.
Honest to God, this is one of the most useful videos that I have ever seen on welding. I am a backyard hobbyist who knows 2 excellent and highly credentialled welders. That doesn't make me anything but not as good as them by a long shot.
They tell me this, and help me with that, and I am getting better. But this video tells me what they were really trying to tell me.
My welds are better because of this video.
Thanks! I don't wanna suck at anything that I do.
Mucho Gracias for the help. (Yes, I subscribed a few months ago)
If your welds sound like bacon, then you're doing great! Keep it up!
If your welds smell like bacon then sorry buddy, but you're on fire.
lol . so many times I saw some welder : Damn . It smell like burn in here !" . and me : "True ! You are on Fire !"
Brazing always made me so hungry. The burning of my gloves made me want hamburgers all the time.
Actually your weld should be silent, no sound but the gas.
@@marlondking5881 umm that's not how it works.
Unless your just really hard of hearing then I guess you won't hear anything.
@@dimesonhiseyes9134 Bacon sounds mean not clean surface, or wrong, setting. 40 years welding.
The explanation was so good that even for a non welder, it was easy to understand. Well done, sir.
you are a life saver!!!!! I'm at an OJT for a factory and was trailing the class because i did not know what i was looking for. thanks, you're a life saver!!!
10 years of being an automotive tech. ASE master tech certified, and I have 0 training in welding. I learned to do what I can do by watching and listening to the older more experienced mechanics when they weld. I practiced on my own free time and played with the wire feed and voltage settings until I could replicate the look/sound of the welds they did.
Today I was trying to weld repair an exhaust on one of our Ram trucks somebody tired to steal the cats off of one night.... I played around with the wire feed and voltage settings for half an hour and I just couldn't get it right. I was getting very frustrated that I couldn't get my welds to come out right, and after a half an hour of trying different things, and thinking I was doing something wrong, thats when I decided to check the gas.... Sure enough the whole time I was messing with the voltage, and the wire speed, trying to get the right settings to get a good weld, and the damn argon tank was empty....
I decided, altho I haven't had any formal training in welding, I'm very willing to learn, and your video I found to be a great help.... Now I can see the common mistakes and what they look/sound like. I have a better idea of what needs corrected with my welds. I"ll watch your video a few times over until I got it in my head. And of course watch a few more. But I hope to learn what and how needs to change with my welding to make it better. Rather than continuing on like I have in the past and just playing around and practicing until I can replicate what the pro's do. In short I want to be able to tell whats wrong with my welds right away and fix it, rather than just keep messing around until I get it right and go with that. I think videos like this will help me get there. Thank you!
I've made the mistake plenty of times of forgetting to turn the tank on and attempting to weld lol I always find a piece of scrap metal to weld on right before I do a project to ensure that I have all the settings right
That's why it has that little " ball " if it doesn't float, there is no gas in tank or it's off!
Blow hard that’s all I have to say lol stfu
Once you find out the common mistakes you identify them pretty quickly. No or low gas often sounds like the weld is hissing. The sizzling bacon sound turns more into a muffled hissing which is the weld literally burning in the oxygen from the air. The sounds reveal jus as much as the looks. Even no argon has it's own district sound.
Welding in automotive is totally different then industrial Welding. You'll stay in uncomfortable positions, shot crappie metal under 1 mm thickness, rust, paint, zinc in places where you can't really and properly clean. There's not right way or wrong way when Welding on cars. Most of the time I use point or two steps Welding.
When I was welding daily I did pretty good but I still didn't really know what I was doing. When I would go months without welding my welds looked like bird do do at 10,000 feet. A lot of the mistakes you have identified will make me go about welding more methodically in the future. This was a great lesson for me. I loved your video and I will refer to it before I start to weld anything in the future. Thank you.
This is I find very helpful. I'm getting industry education in my country, and we been welding or using lathe on every Wednesday for a year, but only problem is that we don't got a welding teacher, so I am about to have an exam where I can get welding tasks without actually knowing how to weld properly.
Thank you for the video. I’ve watched lots of weld videos and yours are the simplest and clearest with demonstrations that are spot on. I really like you doing part of the weld correctly then part of the weld incorrectly as it shows me a direct comparison without having to pause the video to look at the good weld, or go back to the good weld in the video to compare.
Masterclass in gas shield electric welding by a teacher with obvious skill and experience.
Thank you sir, you may inspire so many to take up a more useful, peaceable gun.
Wrong way totally bogus this guy is not teaching proper welding methods and this video shows you do not pull a gas fed Mig you push it and if he is AWS certified? In Gas fed Mig he would have had to push weld or he would have Failed the certified test.
I see a lot of welding videos but they either talk too much or are not really expert welders at all. This man is fantastic explains very well and demonstrates both the bad weld and the good weld so one can really see the difference. Well done sir and thank you.
Here is a playlist to jump from mistake to mistake:
0:48 What you should see/hear
1:20 Rusted surface
2:42 Volts too high
3:24 Volts too low
4:10 WFS too high
4:43 WFS stupid low
5:07 WFS too low
6:31 Proper stickout
6:43 Stickout too long
8:18 Proper stickout
8:26 Stickout too short
10:13 Gas too high
10:45 Gas too low
11:46 Proper travel speed
11:56 Travel speed too fast
12:27 Proper travel speed
12:38 Travel speed too slow
14:18 Proper gun angle
14:29 Too much drag angle
14:55 Proper gun angle
15:05 Too much push angle
You're welcome!
Thank you!
Legend
Wfs stupid low lol
You went all in. Nice man ✌️
I am starting up welding next week, i am looking around for specific do's and dont's. I know that usually comes with practice and doing it, but I want to get a general understanding of how to do it right. Thank you for this video has already helped me get an idea of what to expect.
I've just found this video and its been probably the best video out there for helping newbies to learn...
I've never attempted to weld in my life (I'm 54 years young!) but I brought a Clarke 135TE MIG welder because I want to learn and I have a car that needs a fair amount of welding. I dont want to pay someone else to do the work when I can learn myself! Yes I know it can all go horribly wrong but then again that's on me so please nobody tell me I'm an idiot :-).
I have been practising on thin sheet mild steel for a little while now and am brave enough after trying the recommendations from this video to try welding the rear shock towers on my 22 year old Mercedes SLK 320 project car. I will record it and put the videos up on my TH-cam channel so people can either see that if I can make a passable job of it then they can try OR that Its almost impossible and without extensive practise and learning, get a professional in lol.
For those interested, I will be attempting to weld it as soon as the weather is good to me here in the UK and I can coordinate with my partners son so I have someone with me to make sure I dont set fire to the inside of the boot (trunk for you American guys and girls 🙂).
Wish me luck and im ready when the weather improves as I have to weld outside on my driveway, its now 2nd April 2022 and I aim to have a video up within a couple of weeks god willing 🙂
Apologise for hijacking your video Weld.com, that's certainly not my intension, my main point in all this is that you have given me the confidence to at least try even if it all goes wrong after my practising. Thank you..... Aspie Geek UK
Your presentation, as an educator, is spot on! Your knowledge of the subject matter comes through loud and clear! This is an excellent video, especially for the serious minded individual who seeks to become more than competent in MIG welding. I am thrilled to find such high quality on a subject that presently interests me! Thank you very much...well done!
Did you mean to say "Spot WELD on?"
Never welded before. Still watched the entire video. Very interesting lol and made me consider getting into the field.
It's pretty badass
I have a little experience with welding and my welds look similar to his good welds. Once you get the hang of it and get good at it, it becomes kinda addicting and you'll want to weld everything together... At least I did.
There's a lot of different kinds of jobs welding you could be stick welding on a sheet metal roofs, MiG welding in a shop, TIG welding stainless steel pipe in a refinery, or be a rig welder doing everything yourself. Pay can very a lot to you could make minimum wage but I've seen rig welds make (no joke) 4,000 a week and they were the laziest people I have ever worked with.
its not hard, grab an inverter for a few hundred bucks
@@JackinTheBox1984 my metal working teacher in highschool knew a place where a 18 year old could apprentice and make 140000 a year after training
Wow this video is great. A person could learn how to MIG solely with these tips. I just got MIG after using stick only for a couple years and I feel like I'll be back here at some point! Thank you so much.
Hey man, i'm learning a little bit of welding for my automotive class, and i'm awful at it lol. This video made me see what i'm doing wrong. My major problem is distance and speed, and it's more with stick welding because we've just started with mig, but i'm able to see in detail what i've been doing wrong. My teacher uses a lot of your videos for our class, and they're great. Thanks for putting this out there.
As a beginner ti MIG welding (since I inherited a machine), I found this video very informative and will be putting into practice what I have learned. Thanks very much!
It's better to push your welds instead of pulling when using MIG though.
@@mathieufredette3157 I'm not even a beginner yet - welder is due to arrive today! Yipee!
It is said that If there's slag you drag. MIG means Metal In Gas but gasless MIG as a description makes no sense. There is a gas in the flux I guess but there is also some slag so I would assume, push with gas, drag with gasless. Is that a fair comment?
@@jed2055 M.I.G. means "metal inert gas" as in the gas you are using has no active properties
@@jed2055 M.A.G. is a thing too. There can only be slag on your welding if you use flux core.
finally a good tutorial! i used to buy my 125$ welder and now i had to weld two pieces of metal, saw this tutorial and put everything like him, PERFECT WELD LINE. i said everything.
This is a very informative and well-presented instructional. There were a few more points you could have made, such as when your travel speed was too slow, the weld penetration was hugely increased, you can just about see it when you turned the parent metal over and used the other side. Also, the too much gas produced a colder weld. or at least it certainly looks like it.
I'll be recommending this as a video to watch whenever anyone asks me "so, how do I used this welder then?". It covers all the basics, and if followed properly should have even a novice laying down some decent weld beads. Or at least knowing what was wrong with them.
The calm, smooth delivery of your information was possibly matched only by the calm, smooth delivery of your welds :) Subbed.
I appreciate the time you guys have spent putting this together for us! Extremely vivid examples of what to look for while I'm practicing on my own. You have earned a subscriber & a fan! Thank you!
Thank you for sharing your knowledge...one of the best teacher i watched.
Here I am learning how to weld while having NO welder
John Smith I hear you
Same. But one thing I have noticed in life, is knowledge isn't wasted. You may not know how to weld, but learning the differences in what the material looks like in a "good" form and in all the "bad" forms, means that when you look at a weld on something you own, are thinking about buying, or are inspecting, you now have a basic knowledge to make informed opinions on it.
Or nothing currently needed welded!!! 😂
@Paul Bee If you watched a video on that, you made that choice. TH-cam didn't force you to watch that, but something you had watched in the past created a path to allow TH-cam to recommend it to you.
@Paul Bee Some people choose to remain ignorant. Can't change that.
I've gone thru about 40 lbs of wire now, watched lots of videos, and they make it look easy - it's not. When welding in the real world on a project these are my biggest problems: 1) getting in a comfortable position 2) cleaning the metal and getting a good ground 3) being able to see what I'm doing 4) burning the shit out of my hands, feet and sneakers because I fail to wear proper clothing. My best welds are on tiny ass squares of steel that are laying perfectly flat - and they are typically not as good as his. I like this video - and I will continue to have hope.
p52457 Believe me, You're doing great!
Dude I love this. I mean I weld a lot, I have for years. But here’s the thing. Getting really refined and good takes coming back to the basics and being aware after the awareness falls off. It’s refinement.
I’ve been a welder for 8 years and idk why but I still enjoy watching these types of videos.
I've got to say, your skill is evident in the fact that you had a hard time getting "bad results"! A newbie will be HAPPY to see your lackluster welds as their final product 😂 Excellent video instruction!
He is a good speaker, gets the info across with minimum noise, and good video presentation that mattches the message, wish more presenters were this skillful, he seems as if he would have been or perhaps is, a vo- tech instructor.👌👍🔥
My dad was a good welder. When I was a young teen he decided he would teach me the art. The lesson lasted about ten minutes and ended with Dad saying “Stick with comedy son, you ain’t no welder”.
i feel sad, your dad was a welder yes, but a poor teacher.
takes time doing mistakes and learning
It took me 25 years of shitty welding to discover that I just can't see out of my hood. "Dab the rod in the puddle" WTF is the puddle the yellow glowy part?
stick with welding dad you aint no teacher
@@luvmechanix You're right. I need that camera.
@@luvmechanix no the bubble is in your mind lol
I'm so glad he said it, clean metal is absolutely crucial. It's amazing how many people cant grasp that concept.
It definitely is best to clean the metal before welding, but rusted out parts are also possible to sizzle nicely if they can offer support after.
You are very helpful to me. I am one of those, "HALF-FAST"
welders. Now I'm looking to get much more serious with it. thank you.
What a great video! Thank you for the well thought out video, and identifying common problem areas. A lot of people make welding videos, but very few make videos like this that identify common mistakes. Great job!
90% of all the welding i've done was done repairing my car's rust damages. I hate mig-welding thin material such as floor panels/skirts but it's great practise.
I started doing MIG welding and this video helped alot to identify my problems with welding.
man i love these videos... being a beginner and learning on my own, these videos make my life much more enjoyable knowing what i'm looking to do and not do.
This one is definitely going on my favorites list. So I can watch it over and over again.
total beginner here , interview and weld test tomorrow. Your video is extremely helpful , wish me luck
never seen so calm explanation on welding mistakes, its like he is high af and has already acheived super saiyan welder 3 stage.
really like your video i bought a gasless mig welder yesterday and i am going to teach myself how to mig weld i learn alot from your video as a beginner thanks
I will never weld anything in my life ever, but this was still fascinating. Thank you.
This guys the man !!! He seems like he’s a riot to hang out with ! Thanks for the tips bro
I have never welded in my life but I will be starting very soon and I know I'm going to be coming back to this video and if your other videos are of the same quality then I know I'll be using this channel a lot thank you so much
I just had my intake today, I'm hoping to get selected for the next welding class in my area. I am so excited to learn. And this video was great. Thanks for the info
@Devin McGraw good luck!! I'm starting this fall!
@@honestlysquid likewise
You should think about getting you're own set welding really is something you can self teach with just a little bit of determination and persistence you could learn how to run a nice tidy bead straight away. I work in steel fabrication and when i started i was just a laborer (i grafted my bullocks off on the bandsaw/mag drills / the mill and the 2 ops for 12 hours a day 6 days a week) after about 2 months of working hard they decided to try let me learn welding as i seemed to grasp the idea everything else quickly (not welding though😂) after 2 days practice i was getting a nice consistency to my welds one thing i think of and it kinda helps me stay on track is if i start good and keep going the same all the way to the end i will have a nice consistent weld through and through it is no good double guessing yourself because when i have i kind of froze and would forget exactly where i am so basically its just knowing what you are going to do before you do it and then go ahead and execute it. ive now been a welder for 3 years and i am still learning now there is always more to learn.
I can't believe how much I just learned. Thank you so much.
I am a self taught welding and I was making rings for hand drums out of 1/4 cold rolled steel. I have always considered myself a much better grinder then a welder. lol. Thanks for the tips. Over the years my welding did get better.
This was super timely as I was welding up a base for my table saw and my beads were just awful. Thanks for the great tips!
Definetively A WELDING MASTERCLASS!
Been welding for 43 years but its always good to go back to basics and remind yourself of the right way
Hello there! I am looking into literature about weaving patterns in welding. I came across the term "torch weaving" and I've been trying to look it up on google and see what it is, sadly I still haven't figured it out. Do you happen to know what torch weaving is? I only have access to arc welding equipment so I'm not sure if this "torch weaving" is applicable.
Touch welding is just that, using a oxy / acetylene set up with a welding tip on your touch (with one hole) rather than a cutting tip ( with multiple holes) and a fillerwelding. In my 30 years of experience I've never heard the turm "touch weaving" but it would have to be just weaving the touch and rod as to produce a wider weld.
Bob: does his best to make crappy welds.
Me: Bob's welds still look better than my welds. Grrr..
Its the machine. . . .
bikedeefer to some point. But it’s mostly the operator.
Frustrating, isn’t it? He really has a hard time getting this to not come out right. We all wish we had that problem.
I try to get bad welds. In that way I’m much better than Bob, because I succeed better than he does at that.
@@melgross ha! yea, i could probably do everything wrong and make it look way worse as i have no clue what im doing. i can barely stick weld.
It's always difficult to do something wrong correctly
this is so effective as a teaching vehicle. Great content, explained well. Very helpful for us rookies!! Thanks!
Nice
I like listening to a tradesman talk. They're the only honest speakers.
Ty for the help I’m trying to remember proper technique it’s been years that have not welded and new job will require it on a cation
Ty again just subbed for more 👍
When I started learning the mig I looked and looked for a video like this. You nailed it! Great clip
Buddy you are a true master, even your bad welds are 1000 times better than mine. Great upload and thank you for your great advice!!
This is a perfect instructional video. Your information is so helpful and so well presented that I could watch hours of this... and I really mean that. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience. I look forward to applying what I have learned here when my very FIRST MIG welder arrives in the days to come! What could possibly go wrong? :) Please keep up the great work.
Thank you for such a great tutorial video. One for the favorite files! I’m new to mig welding and this video has been very helpful to me in my new hobby. Thumbs way up!! 🙏👍
I been watching Bobs videos a long time. He has taught me a lot of things that made me a far better welder than I ever thought I could become.
That was probably without doubt, one of the coolest, most straight forward, and informative to the Max videos, I have EVER seen on YT. Bloody awesome work mate, fair dinkum, you’re like the rainman of welding. Noice going 🤙🤙🤙🤙🤙🤙
I worked as a machinist for many years. I would often hangout in the weld shop during lunch and mess around. After watching this video, I noticed I was an expert at doing it wrong lol.
One of the best Tutorial videos on the Fundamentals and basics of MiG welding, thanks for sharing and keep up the good work.
That was excellent! Thank you for making the set up process so clear with great demonstrations.
at 12:38 it says "Travel speed Too Fast" when it should say "Travel Speed Too Slow". Just thought I'd point that out....
At the age of 75 I have always admired the art of welding probably the one thing in my life that I would have loved to have done but never learnt thi guy is an excellent tutor
I actually took notes, this is really good information, thank you. This will help me become a better welder.
Man i wish i had teachers like you, i also wish to be a teenager again :(
Don't we all. The biggest shame is that we only live once. I wish I had infinite do-overs to keep experimenting and learning and getting it wrong, and right, and wrong, and right again.
true. So little time so much you can learn.
Teenager is a bit too young, you don't wanna relive that... early adult hood is a good place to go back to.
I'm 46 years old and just started a new career in welding and fabrication.
This video was the best thing I could have watched regarding my life @ work right now.
Thanks so much for your professional advice and insight. \○○/
Well presented, if I ever DO break out the MIG, I will watch this through again. Thx.
If you watch this to learn to weld....Give up and go to your nearest collage
@@slit4659 How is decoupage going to help? ;-)
Awesome learning video, factual and I love the demonstrations so one knows exactly what to look for! Thank you!
Dear.sir.realy.inside.my.heart.i.toldyou.you.are.my.teacher.realy.no1welder.in.the.all.world.tnx.dear.sir.you&your.allfamily.members.jesus.blessed.alltime
its 2 o'clock in the morning here.. wtf am i watching, i've never even held a welding machine in my life
What Miles said! Also, buy an Everlast, too! Make sure both are Multi-Process with all 3 polarities. Get plenty of welding consumables that which you can afford (E.G.: Welding Electrode Sticks and Electrode Holder, TIG Consumables, MIG Wire, FCAW Wire, Dual-Shield Wire, welding books along with fab books, and plenty of metal to practice on). Don't forget, welding safety is extremely important, too, so get a welding jacket, a fire resistant button-up shirt, a fire resistant long-sleeve T to go under the button-up shirt and welding jacket top layers, some good fire resistant pants, and some nice steel-toed boots. Get to welding, bud!!
lol 2:09 here
Cocaine is a hell of a drug huh!!
It’s a sign from the gods!
Darn TH-cam algorithms! ;)
In my case I love to see others explain common mistakes and configurations.
As a welder I'm a good grinder. Really nice video. That guy is a hell of a welder!
As a welder of 7 years now (not straight in a row, and unticketed), I have a few questions.
1. I was taught MIG is a push, flux core/stick is pull. Is this not right? I just watched you pulling a MIG weld...which i was taught is supposed to be a push angle...or is it one of those "situational" type uses, where based on what you're aiming for the outcome of the weld, is what determines how one lays down the weld?
2. When it comes to voltage/WFS, I've always tended to aim for a setting where the point of contact, turns into a tiny electrical votex surrounding the wire. Doesn't have a popping type sound, but a somewhat hum type sound. Is this just a type of welding (in regards to terminology, 'spray' welding for example), or have I been doing it wrong?
3. The place I work has the opinion "just weld it, it'll burn through the rust/paint." As a result, I've seen ALOT of that glass type stuff on alot of my welds. Doesn't that stuff develope inside the weld as well, causing weaknesses? I prefer to clean everything I weld (works alot better!) but...when one is told to "just weld it" and one is getting paid....ya either argue with someone that has no idea what a proper weld is (and doesn't care, apparently), or just do as one's told (which is very depressing...I like my weld being proper, for what I've been taught).
PS. Alot of my welds are a cross between your 'proper' setting and your "too high heat' setting....but I'm also using a metal core .053 wire, which maybe makes the difference?
"1. I was taught MIG is a push, flux core/stick is pull."
First thing I thought watching this
I was taught push mig, pull stick/mma
Same here...taught to push MIG...so gas shields ahead of weld. I have been told pulling with MIG will penetrate deeper. Ive pulled and had no issues also....
TheDarkLordsofHell Push for penetration. Pull for build up. Only an idiot would tell you to weld over rust or paint as it will contaminate the weld. Also if it is older paint it’s probably lead based.
My brother is a great welder and I've been trying to learn. Well teaching it just ends up with him doing it for me instead. So I figured out I'm on my own learning. I have been having trouble getting the machine in tune and figuring out if my settings were correct. Going nuts and have had every issue this guy shows. This video is perfect I am going to try this out tonight. Funny how his welds still look way better on bad settings. But I also have a harbor freight special so good be part of my issues
Was a welder for twenty five years .Talking from experience ,Make sure you get your set right before attempting to weld anything, Here is a useful tip from a man now long gone who learnt me how to weld. Your set should sound like bacon sizzling in a pan, he told me.Do that and you won't have no problems .And to be honest I didn't. Modern times my foreman used to ask me to give people applying for a job to give them a weld test.All I did was to alter the settings on the machine before they started welding ,Some didn't and would fail by not doing so and it would end up by what many welders call looked pigeon s**t. The ones that altered the setting on the machine before welding got the job.One more tip before I go fellas make sure you you get proper breathing apparatus that is about now and not when I used to weld . Because Industrial C.O.P.D. is set to send me to the grave earlier than I expected.
Yup! I only weld 2-3 times a year, so I keep scrap steel around just for practice before I start on a project!
I’d like to know what the tip of your gun looks like after correct welds are done, like how much spatter should there be in the nozzle and on the contact tip.