This is my kinda welding content....no jokes, no inappropriate unrelated music from start to finish. Ever ASMR with the sound with the arc crackling will suffice.
Also struggling with vertical 7018 restarts. I even watched someone do some restarts and tried doing the same exact thing with no luck but his were flawless. Where exactly do you look when you tie in? Every one of mine was humped up or had a void like i missed the tie in.
@misery_follows, I’m sure he knows a good method to restart. He was probably using some sort of sarcasm or hyperbole to compliment dude. It’s not that hard to imagine.
7018 AC is better because titania gives you a more stable arc. If 7016 has titania, then that will my second best choice. You can't fight arc blow with DC only electrodes anyway.
Last couple pipe tests I took I would get porosity under the surface of the restart where I J-hook and travel back over the deposited slag. The porosity wouldn’t surface but I could grind into the weld and see holes. What can I do to avoid this in the future, seems like it never used to be a problem but I’m mainly a tig welder so haven’t run much stick other than weld tests for jobs.
Best thing I could say is to practice all the methods advised here and in another comment I seen about vertical uphill restarts. If you figure it out from practicing, practice it until you can’t fail with your eyes closed. wear that thin tillman glove or the large gm1510 and heat pads so you can feel every detail. You’re obviously passionate about it because you’re inquiring. You just gotta practice. It’s better to practice even if you have to do it on your own time and dime. The better you are, the more $ you can demand. Everyone is gonna have a different answer probably. They’re probably all right.
I got this from another comment @LeadRakFPS 7 months ago @henry johnson The amount of possible slag or porosity you weld back over will burn out because you're not doing it slowly enough to cause a substantial amount of build-up. You need to practice restarts so they are smooth, fast and consistent. If you don't do a good 1" or better (especially in machines that have no hot start control) restart, you will more than likely have a substantial amount of porosity in that restart, which is caused by the rod cold starting and not having enough time to establish the gases created when the Flux is melting away and uniformly solidifying over the puddle. Dragging it back from about an 1" or so away only leaves small trace amounts of defects that are more than consumed by the hot puddle after you establish it and weld back over it. I've had bad shots by starting right on a restart, but never had bad shots by doing a good enough drag back.
@Welder B1 Family I mean the restart. When he starts about an inch forwards, comes back and then co tinues the weld. Doesn't that chance running over slag?
@henry johnson The amount of possible slag or porosity you weld back over will burn out because you're not doing it slowly enough to cause a substantial amount of build-up. You need to practice restarts so they are smooth, fast and consistent. If you don't do a good 1" or better (especially in machines that have no hot start control) restart, you will more than likely have a substantial amount of porosity in that restart, which is caused by the rod cold starting and not having enough time to establish the gases created when the Flux is melting away and uniformly solidifying over the puddle. Dragging it back from about an 1" or so away only leaves small trace amounts of defects that are more than consumed by the hot puddle after you establish it and weld back over it. I've had bad shots by starting right on a restart, but never had bad shots by doing a good enough drag back.
@@LeadRakFPS interesting. It's because I was doing them wrong, but drag backs always caused porosity for me. I've found that, depending on the type of weld or thickness of rod, doing a little "C" shaped trace of the stop or just starting on my stop, moving a little slowly and then speeding up to my travel speed has good enough results.
You forgot to mention when you go back to the restart to do circles counting to 3 a lot of that slag gets trapped bud. But you guys will never teach it right
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This is my kinda welding content....no jokes, no inappropriate unrelated music from start to finish. Ever ASMR with the sound with the arc crackling will suffice.
You sound like a crying baby welder. Pacifier sucking a s s baby
I never realized how much I love that sound. It’s therapeutic
@@Mr.Phoreskinmakes me want bacon and fried chicken so bad at work it’s like 11:30 I’m mad hungry
yup and the welding isn't sped up
People always have these magical sticks where the slag jsut flies off so clean.. Here im trying to remove it with a sledgehammer
higher amps and consistent speed and it will peel
That 190amps ...whoa
I was taught 90 amps for flat
I was running 90 earlier 190 scared me for a second
@@Stickygrape-b1uits a 5/32 rod not 3/32
@@dillanfulkerson8707that’s what I’m saying 190 is crazy max is run is 115
@@TristanCandelasthis is not a 1/8 7018 rod, it’s 5/32 so 190 is appropriate
This went in my “improvement” playlist lol
Damn, improvement playlist is legit, definitely gna start mines
And dont forget the backstep method. Great video.
If anyone wants to learn about Jesus Christ reply
Massive puddle. Awesome stuff
Excellent welding advice 👍👍now you could do a video on horizontal and overhead.
Just do a J , you strike a half an inch away and go back down and loop around as you come back up picking up on your stop
Thank you for the video
🤔3/32 for weld test would Doctor it up or just use what you got if you can use a grinder.
Now explain how to restart on vertical uphill welding please.
You can just drag it slowly or touch your puddle then pull up
Drag down towards your last stop, but do so in a "J" motion that way you burn over your strike marks.
J hook the puddle and start climbing immediately
Also struggling with vertical 7018 restarts. I even watched someone do some restarts and tried doing the same exact thing with no luck but his were flawless. Where exactly do you look when you tie in? Every one of mine was humped up or had a void like i missed the tie in.
Good impression
i was told to restart 3/8 inch away from my stop but if this works better im sticking to it
The bacon frying wonderful lly
How does it look in xray? I was told there would be fails here and there doinf that?
At first glance, it's the old master
Nice video sir
DAMMMNNN!! 😮😮😮 THATS NOICE! I QUIT WELDING 😂 AINT NO WAY I COULD DO THAT LMAO 🤣
lmao try restarting on pipe u couldn’t do much if you can’t even restart a stringer bud
@@misery_followsokay bud
@@Thebrownhammer23 okay bud what how dumb are you lol
@misery_follows, I’m sure he knows a good method to restart. He was probably using some sort of sarcasm or hyperbole to compliment dude. It’s not that hard to imagine.
Burn to learn my friend. I was horrible at first. My welds aren't that bad anymore and I'm certified..
7018 AC is better because titania gives you a more stable arc.
If 7016 has titania, then that will my second best choice.
You can't fight arc blow with DC only electrodes anyway.
Last couple pipe tests I took I would get porosity under the surface of the restart where I J-hook and travel back over the deposited slag. The porosity wouldn’t surface but I could grind into the weld and see holes. What can I do to avoid this in the future, seems like it never used to be a problem but I’m mainly a tig welder so haven’t run much stick other than weld tests for jobs.
When dragging back to your restart you got to doing circles and count to 3 and then take off so you can burn all that slag and you don’t get porosity
Best thing I could say is to practice all the methods advised here and in another comment I seen about vertical uphill restarts. If you figure it out from practicing, practice it until you can’t fail with your eyes closed. wear that thin tillman glove or the large gm1510 and heat pads so you can feel every detail. You’re obviously passionate about it because you’re inquiring. You just gotta practice. It’s better to practice even if you have to do it on your own time and dime. The better you are, the more $ you can demand. Everyone is gonna have a different answer probably. They’re probably all right.
I got this from another comment
@LeadRakFPS
7 months ago
@henry johnson The amount of possible slag or porosity you weld back over will burn out because you're not doing it slowly enough to cause a substantial amount of build-up. You need to practice restarts so they are smooth, fast and consistent. If you don't do a good 1" or better (especially in machines that have no hot start control) restart, you will more than likely have a substantial amount of porosity in that restart, which is caused by the rod cold starting and not having enough time to establish the gases created when the Flux is melting away and uniformly solidifying over the puddle. Dragging it back from about an 1" or so away only leaves small trace amounts of defects that are more than consumed by the hot puddle after you establish it and weld back over it. I've had bad shots by starting right on a restart, but never had bad shots by doing a good enough drag back.
Doesn't that chance running over slag?
Clean it first
@Welder B1 Family I mean the restart. When he starts about an inch forwards, comes back and then co tinues the weld. Doesn't that chance running over slag?
@henry johnson The amount of possible slag or porosity you weld back over will burn out because you're not doing it slowly enough to cause a substantial amount of build-up. You need to practice restarts so they are smooth, fast and consistent. If you don't do a good 1" or better (especially in machines that have no hot start control) restart, you will more than likely have a substantial amount of porosity in that restart, which is caused by the rod cold starting and not having enough time to establish the gases created when the Flux is melting away and uniformly solidifying over the puddle. Dragging it back from about an 1" or so away only leaves small trace amounts of defects that are more than consumed by the hot puddle after you establish it and weld back over it. I've had bad shots by starting right on a restart, but never had bad shots by doing a good enough drag back.
If you learn how to weld you will be told this in your first week.
@@LeadRakFPS interesting. It's because I was doing them wrong, but drag backs always caused porosity for me. I've found that, depending on the type of weld or thickness of rod, doing a little "C" shaped trace of the stop or just starting on my stop, moving a little slowly and then speeding up to my travel speed has good enough results.
Is it the same for 6010 1/8
Cool
👏
One of the few reasons I gave up on welding 😂
I love Villa but £1 a minute each has priced me out.
Looks like gp rod
Muy bien 👌
190? Holy shit
My jaw dropped a little as well, but looking at 4mm Esab OK 48.00 which is a 7018, it actually puts 190A on the top end of the recommended spectrum.
I run like 80 to 95 amps lol
@@TheRoseCursesame 😂 shit my stick welder does max 120 LMAO
I run at like 120
Wait 🤦🏾♂️….190 Amps 😮.For wat
That is not good relationship advice sometimes the in and out needs a bit of slow and go
Spend there too much time, he does not…
Kind of didn't explain anything
You forgot to mention when you go back to the restart to do circles counting to 3 a lot of that slag gets trapped bud. But you guys will never teach it right
j hook