Jay4200
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2005
- Messages
- 2,053
- Location
- Hudson/Weare, NH
- Tractor
- L4200GST w/ LA680 & BX2200D w/ LA211
I've owned welders and done DIY welding for years for the occasional project, but my welding hasn't really improved a whole ton. I've never had anyone show me what too fast or too slow or too cold or too hot looks like, so I'm having a tough time diagnosing what I'm doing wrong (or right). Sometimes my welds look absolutely great - with the whole stack of dimes thing, but other times they look like poo - holes and blobs and splatter...and I swear I'm doing the exact same thing with the same setup all the time. I'm trying to whittle down the variables...so bear with me if these are stupid questions.
When making a weld with either a coil fed (I use flux-core) or a stick, and ignoring any kind of fancy applications, are you generally supposed to run straight up the weld or weave the stick/gun back n' forth or around in little circles as you go?
Also, when running a stick weld, do you kinda press the rod into the metal as you go (or drag it against the surface) and let the arc do its thing for inherent distance, or do you actively try to hold the stick some fraction of an inch away from the weld?
When making a weld with either a coil fed (I use flux-core) or a stick, and ignoring any kind of fancy applications, are you generally supposed to run straight up the weld or weave the stick/gun back n' forth or around in little circles as you go?
Also, when running a stick weld, do you kinda press the rod into the metal as you go (or drag it against the surface) and let the arc do its thing for inherent distance, or do you actively try to hold the stick some fraction of an inch away from the weld?