sd455dan
Elite Member
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2012
- Messages
- 4,812
- Location
- North Idaho
- Tractor
- Rhino 554, Ford 550 TLB (JD X500, MTD, Gilson riding mowers) Ford 3000-Sold
AndNow everyone's convincing me I need to get set up properly for TIG! Those are all applications I could use.
Aside from the bedframe/tray chassis described above, here are typical past projects:
Fabricated a drawbar from junk materials for a spike harrow. Ground through most of the rust then used the big ac stick welder.
The completed drawbar project including a 3-point lifter built from exercise machine parts.
Detail. I welded 'ears' on the lifter mast to pin it to the Qhitch. This was the last thing I used the AC HF-90 flux welder on before I replaced it with a DC 110v welder.
... And a trailer hitch welded to front bucket using the DC 110v Century-135 welder that replaced the AC-only HF-90. The Century did much nicer work. I recently sold the Century for what I had paid for it. (The HF Mig-180 duplicated it and also does more).
I agree about the bed frame material- it is a little funky to weld with although it has good strength it does seem to be harder to get as clean of weld as new mild steel- just from the welding I have done re-purposing it.
Tig does seem to make stronger welds sometimes- i have the old Gilson riding mower under the avatar and both sides have suffered snapped off spindles for the mower blades. tried and succeeded welding the blade support back on with my mig multiple times over the years but was lucky to not lose both blades a couple times each mowing season. I decided to have a go with the tig and both blades have stayed on with no sign of failure- no real explanation and the prep work was no better than done for the Mig process.
Tig also came in handy a while back saving an old set of jumper cables, i was to cheap to throw them out and didn't want to spend the money on new ends, cleaned up the jaws where the copper used to be crimped and used the Tig to melt the copper and it fused right to the steel jaws. that set of cables is better than when i bought them as far as transferring current to start a dead vehicle.
As was pointed out welding things to bolts small fittings and working with different metals- tig is in a class of it's own, Eventually i want to build some custom hedders and even an aluminum air intake out of AU for my Volvo Penta boat engine.
There are times when a need comes up to weld some really fine work and or special metal and it becomes obvious very quickly that a Tig is about the only solution to solve a welding problem,
Get or even rent a Bottle of Argon and give Tig a try, It is kind of addicting