Different Types of Welding
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- Опубліковано 11 жов 2024
- Different Types of Welding...
www.weldingtips...
Tig Welding, Stick welding, and mig welding make up most of what you and I do at home in the shop. Sure there is gas welding, plasma arc welding, laser welding, electron beam welding, spot welding, and friction stir welding but Tig, Stick, and Mig is what Joe Welder does. Stick Welding is still called Arc Welding by a lot of people.
I've been welding for 29 years now.
I love your videos!
Still learning or relearning as I go. Maybe it's oltimers desease of crs.
This was a very informative overview of the 3 most popular welding types. You crammed in all the need to know information without having me feel I waisted time on unneeded or bloated information. Thanks so much. Will be watching the rest of your videos.
Your heavy wall pipe welds are some of the best I ever saw and I have been a pipe welder for 23 years.
When I'm learning something in which the final product is more abstract or is more of an idea, I am fine with just reading and hearing about it. But for stuff like this, in which the final product is straightforward and is an actual object, I need to see and do it. So vids like this are a great help. Thanks.
Once again Jody...fantastic job. Best intro I've ever heard not just in terms of content but presentation as well. I was glued to the video. I'm completely new to welding but have become obsessed with TIG in particular. Thanks to you, my obsession is starting to spread out to the other types as well.
I decided, (a spur of the moment thing) to have a look at the subject, after buying myself a soldering iron today.
Yeah, a real big jump, but two methods bonding metals together.
It got me to thinking and I always think big. Lol.
Obviously, the two are world's apart, but, thanks to your video, I find myself fascinated.
Who would have guessed there were so many methods...at least to those, like myself, who never give it a second thought.
I grew up watching stick welders, against the advice of smarter folk and often had eye problems.
Thank you for such a glut of information, passed on in an open, easy and well informed manner!
Learning curves...I never tire of them.
Cool video, newbie here trying to learn the basics of welding, never done it before. Need some more basic stuff like this.
+Steven Tyler same here
Steven Tyler
Not to worry, you are likely to still be the newbie some 2 years later, at very least that's how I feel watching these guys who can truly call themselves a welder. Compared to them I'm a newb, this business is funny imho cause mostly where I see people yell about their skills I often shy away a bit cause experience telling me that when finally witnessing them weld it comes out... #$%@ and none the wiser, but sometimes I get very positively surprised when some quiet guy who never said anything start to weld and I think to myself, ohh mine this guy can weld. So I will always be the newb and ok with that too, a Picasso I might never weld.
Go to tech school and learn how. Did that at age 69.
Best way to learn is just weld and try new things (not like stupid things ofc)
Great video!! I like your little finger cover. When I was working for DuPont Chemical plant in Waynesboro VA I was tig welding stainless steel pipe. Nothing any bigger than 2”! Clean job!!! I could have worn a suit and tie to work and went home clean. I had a cover for my baby finger and ring finger. That’s all I used. No glove!!! When tig welding cap on 1” heavy wall stainless steel tubing it looks like a wedding band when done. Purge inside when welding. I loved that job.
I've done a bit of stick welding and some mig welding with my everlast welder but I'm really looking forward to learning how to tig weld and Jody's videos will be front and center as I learn.
dude, you broke this shit down perfectly. I knew nothing, and now all the questions ive had were not only answered, but I didnt have to sit through a 30 minute video to get them. Great vid thanks.
You know your stuff. Well done man.
This is the best video I've found to show people who want to know more about my everlast welders and what I do with them!
Great explanation ! Congratulations. I has been in electronics for 20 years and now I am starting with some metal structures for machines and you give a great overview of the welding types and uses. thank you!
Very nice video. I've gotten pretty good with my MIG. Still lousy with my Tig. I had a 15 year experienced Stick welder Pro. show me stick welding, he hadn't touched a welder since leaving Guatemala 5 years ago and he was amazing, his stick welding beads were gorgeous. But again great informative video.
I liked your explanation, I am preatty new to welding, I do have a small portable inverter and weld all the fences and gate at my home, now trying to learn all kind of related info, thank you for posting it.
u make awesome videos... im a field boilermaker and we still use 80% stick welding in the field,,, other 18% is tig and maybe 2% mig,, u barely ever see mig out there keep up the good videos and info guys..
one thing that would be helpful is showing your input on 309 stick all the way test on a 2" pipe in the 6g position. probably one of the hardest tests thanks
As a complete newbie, the first video I pulled up to introduce myself to welding was chock full of acronyms in the first two minutes that I had no idea what they meant. If your goal was to intimidate and discourage me, then you succeeded, Sir.
Thanks for the great video! I really am glad to see someone give stick rod some proper credit. I weld in a factory the booth I work in uses stick rod about 85% of the time. I weld dissimilar metals constantly and alot of stainless. I also weld on crome-moly and pressure pipe with small diameters. The versility of only having to get diffrent rods out of the oven and amperage adjustment to weld a diffrent joint is vert handy! I face the X-ray all the time even on open root stainless. No problem !
Excellent overview of the key welding processes common to welding. Your examples and shop floor applications are well thought out. Great Mig-welding, Tig-welding, and Stick-welding examples for everyone.
T J (Tom) Vanderloop, AWS Member & Life Member in SME (LSME)
stick is always my favourite, no matter what weather, you can do it. Tig is cleanest and also very fun, but loved the challenge and versatility of stick.
제가 찾던 동영상입니다. 올린이에게 감사드립니다 사업 번창 하시길 기원 합니다. 앞으로 많은 동영상을 보고 학습할 수 있어서 든든합니다.
nice video been welding for 39years and still welding :)
like this because you keep it simple for people with no experiences
This video is exactly what I was looking for! Thanks for posting this!
Stick welding power sources are the best bang for your buck! You never get shut down on a saturday afernoon in the shop because your gas bottle is empty. I weld exaust with 6010 or 6011. 7024 lays down metal as fast as short-circuit mig on heavier metal with ease, eats light scale and rust much better. 7018 all around super quality! If the weld looks good it is is most true with stick. It does take time to learn, but if you master it other process are easily learned later.
Never mind "thanks for watchin" Thank you so much for taking the time to make these they are truly excellent! Thanks again man!
Great overview of the common welding operations. Thanks for the technical knowledge on metallurgy and material sciences. Good overview...a big Thanks!
T J Vanderloop, AWS Member & CAD/CNC Consultant
Great video. Thank you for taking the time to make it.
I am thinking of getting a welder and I was as lost as could anyone could be. LOL Now I have a good basic understanding.
Thanks again.
love that little thing over the little finger in the glove. Can't tell you how many times I went home with a blister on my little finger from welding aluminum. Never thought to ask about a thing like that? Maybe they didn't have them in the 90's?
What always drove me nuts was working in ships that were making railings and bannisters, you want all those teeny welds looking great, but you only have mig welders around, then you gotta grind and sand with dynafiles all over, a tig torch would go so far there, no cleanup really required. Wast more time with mig, and tig is already clean even though slower process, but mig cleanup is even longer.
Welding is an art... I love the things you can put together by welding scrap mettal... it is an awesome skill
Those pipes are monstrous! Shoulda flux core'd them things and made continous welds.
flux wire welder here ive been through 4 pounds of the stuff and i will admit ive come a long way learning the angles to hold the gun and such with raising the amperage for greater penetration. i use a Lincolin weld pack HD i thought i broke it yesterday however it just overheated! its probably the cheapest welder ive seen for the quality. looking to upgrade to tig with the gas for cleaner welding. and more versatile.
Normally I would say go with separate machines but the PowerMTS welders are very reliable. If you are at all thinking of welding with those processes I would suggest picking one up. Get a spool gun too if you are doing aluminum. My 2 cents.
like the 2 heavy wall butts at the end. just finished a procedure that involved 120mm plate single bevel. gtaw root and hot pass 8mm deposit. fcaw 60mm deposit =84 passes and the final fill and cap with saw= 76 passes. preheat was 50 degrees c and interpass was 250 degrees c . the plate was 1 metre long so we could perform multiple mechanicals. nice vids
Great video and good commentary mate easy to understand and take in.
Thank you for that informative and concise to mainstream welding, only after watching your video do I feel I know what is what about welding, Good Job!
Perfect video for new people coming to welding. I wish I saw this video when I bought my first Everlast welder.
Great job, You sound well informed and from what I see you have been at it for some time now. It's been a long time for me but I am thinking about getting a Mig set up. I did stick for a wile many years ago and a little Mig. I see the Tig looks like the real deal witch I have never tried.
@yumyumsashimi the general rule is: you don't want to weld anything that is smaller than the diameter of rod you are using. For instance, if your welding 1/8" sheet metal, you can use 1/8" rod or 3/32" rods. Going to a thicker welding rod will run the risk of blowing through the sheet metal. If its thinner than 3/32" and its carbon metal, I would suggest a 6010 or 7010 type of welding rod that is "fast freezing" and allows you to "whip" the rod and build up the metal.
I use stick at work, mostly for strength more than appearance, I just learned it by myself, as I have to with most things I do there, and although I can do an ok job, that thick walled pipe with the many passes is insanely nice, musta used a lot of rad on that one. Never did any MIG or TIG, but watching this makes me wanna join some coke cans together! Anyways, nice informative video, thanks!
So far, I like mig welding, but I may want to try this...stick welding, it sounds pretty magical.
Good God! Those pipe welds were incredible! Nice vid, thanks
Thanks. PowerMTS with spool gun is on the top of my list.
5:00 that heavy pipe welding is awsome to see. i love your channel! im a tig welder myself and i weld allot of aluminum and stainless steel to train my self because im just 18 and i need more experiance.but i got my tig 1 diploma so im happy XD
quite good , i've been welding for over 2000 years now
definitely stick welding is the way to go if you have a lot of wind or other weather issues
Good for understanding the stringer for the pipe. Good Video
Never owned a mig or flux core,, but i have a stick and tig.. personally around the house on my “projects”.. i use 3\32 7018 on everything...
That was very informative for such a quick video. Answered most of my questions in 5 minutes.
Thanks for the information. I've only welded once and it was just a few inches of stick weld. I want to try more and this is useful information. :-)
@ele21ification looks like a 115v inverter so you could use it in any household plug, dont expect to weld thick ass pipe with it and you might have to go even thinner than 3/32 rod to keep from blowing breakers that are less than 30amp, but its super light and runs off basic household current so nice and portable if it runs id say its worth the money if you can put it to good use
@spelunkerd DC welding is much easier than AC, use reverse DC for the best bead if your welder has that option. Along with a low hydrogen rod you can make very impressive welds with some practice. The cleaner your metal is the easier and nicer the weld will be.
Thanks for taking the time to post these videos.
@weldingtipsandtricks
6011 is colder and has less dig. It also does not displace the flux as well. 6010, with the 5P and 5P+ variants, are suited for contaminated, greasy, dirty material; more so than 6011. Try and jam in a root pass with 6011 and say there it is not any different than 6010.
Excellent video - right to the point.
Stick and tig rule. I love draggin out my PowerTIG welder and lighting up.
love the lil projects and demo pieces its sooo relate able keep it up.
Thanks for the video, love the fast pace and informative content
Another misconception people will have about Flux Core is its always a Gasless process and that absolutely not true. In fact most all Flux Core welding done on heavy equipment manufacturing is done with Gas Flux Core. You still run the same 75/25 gas and everything. And as Jodie says if you know what your doing you can make some of best looking welds as well as some of the strongest possible. Im actually getting to where i prefer it over hard wire gas MIG now to some degree but it all depends on the application. My next venture is to hone my TIG welding skills and at that point ill be well rounded with all welding process's. Of course i figure ill end up with just as much time under the hood to perfect TIG welding as i have with ALL the Stick and MIG processes ive run. But thats ok.. Its never too late to learn more.
You, sir, are speaking of dual shield! That's the ONLY process worth running on heavy equipment.
Mad Anthony Wayne I weld Paving Equipment at the shop i work at now. Thats pretty much how we weld everything. Theres a few things i weld TIG but even the pressure tested stuff is all Flux. Flux Core is also ALOT easier and better for doing pressure tested stuff i think because where you stop and restart doesnt tend to leak like it does with Gas MIG!
You are a really professional welder! Cool video dude!
вы настоящий профессионал своего дела.
whoo this is really helping me to get better for my welding exams
Another great video from you.
Thanks for the amazing videos Jody, I'm one of the few whose job is also his hobby. I always come across your videos and truly enjoy them. Keep up the good work!
A great video and exceptional great content. Well-described information and helpful. Thank you so much for sharing this. I will surely share this video with my friends.
Ok complete day one begginer here.Id like to learn to weld exhaust manifold pipes as a hobby.
What would be the easier method to start welding simple scale sch10 pipes for turbo aplications.
Thanks for your time making all these videos anyway
(sry for my english)
Thank you a lot for this video. This is really very interesting and informative. Keep posting like those amazing videos, this is really awesome.
i started welding for class and this is help full
Another great video! Thank you SO much for sharing your experience with us.
One thing that I have learned in 35 years in the welding industry is that EVERYONE is a better welder than me. Especially third year apprentices and my students. They certainly claim to know more than I do!
i can say from personal experience that my MIG welding got far easier and better looking after i got proficient at Arc, arc is harder to get the hang of but is very good, arc's easier to transport and better for outside welding as the wind can carry away the MIG gas...
Thanks for the great video. I am will soon be starting welding school for mig/tig/flux/pipe welding.
this was great info! Im trying to figure out what I want to get into. im mostly doing hobby/auto welding. Im thinking mig, but one thing i dont know that you mentioned..what CANT mig do?
That heavy wall pipe work ... that’s a long day in the office right there
Good beginner video, plenty of info too.
Great video. Very comprehensive
Thankyou very much very good channel very helpfully
ya se todos esos prosesos para soldar tig,mig,stick,flux, solo que me encanta tig por que ase el trabajo mas limpio 😍 aparte que se ve hermoso ☺
@durgledoggy not forgetting of course PAW and SAW (plasma arc and submerged arc) but hey, its called arc welding plain and simple, we dont want to confuse anyone....haha
Excellent instruction - thanks!
stick holder allows you to angle the filler rod or bend the filler rod looks cool but I need to understand more about the dc and ac machines the smaller machines are usually only ac 120 or 240 but having dc and different polarities may do something different that I currently don't understand
Here's the question, what's your favorite Jody? My guess is tig. Love tig myself
jesus man look at all them passes you gotta make on those pipes with the stick, thatll take all day
Thanks man.
Very helpful to me.
For a hobbiest what is the best type of welder to get ? I did some welding in high school but that's about it. So I guess my question is what is the cheapest and best (easiest) welder to get for someone who is just going to do minimal welding on projects.
I am hooked on welding.
Awesome overview Thank you for putting it together!
Very informative thanks! I wish I could have all three
What a great video, true expert.
I find 10 years old comment
Great video, big Thanks and respect.
would have liked to see you cover a bit on oxyacetylene
I want to learn them all. I started with stick welding with my powerarc welder. I've since bought a powerimig and powertig welder.
keep up the good work , you almost weld as good as me :) just kidding :) I don't weld parts for the power lines anymore, I'm sure I'm rusty . Nice video man
Do you have any experience with old school gas welding? I only have a DC stick welder and I like it, I was considering a scratch start tig setup to cheaply expand my options, but if I wanted to I could get a gas welding setup for free, minus the bottles. Reading up on gas, it seems it can do the same job, more or less, and it can silver solder and braze.
I would love to see a video of stick welding with 1/8 - 7018 rod welding in a tight position.. Currently working on welding 1/4 plates on steel post but with very little space.. I have to bend rods into a sort of "S" shape to get down into the space and weld vertical and having difficult time trying to be consistent..welds are ugly and can only burn about a 3rd of the rod...please help
You are the man for this video
lots of good information for beginners thanks
Super-hello fellow brother boilermaker! How's the work been I'm Texas?
For me it took a few days to get decent at mig, tig, dual shield and 7024 but I found them easier than pipe welding with 6010 root and a 7018 cover which I have did on amonia refrigeration pipeing for 25 years but maybe it is because I really know what I'm looking at now compared to when I started stick welding years ago, anyhow I like all types of welding except tig in the 6g with a open butt, that 7 o clock to about 9 o clock is terrible for me but I can pass a xray and have. just lucky.
This is top information..great job on the video and information!!