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Question about welding


jeffminsc

Well-Known Member
RBV's on Boost
Joined
Jan 23, 2009
Messages
57
City
Rowesville , South Carolina
Vehicle Year
1988,1986
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Manual
hey guys, I was welding a bumper on my car trailer but I keep getting holes in my weld bead. I'm using a MIG welder with solid wire and mix gas (75/25) I am using an old hunk of metal that I had laying around. I think it must have a galvanized coating on it because it is not rusty and has been sitting outside. I ground it down to shinny metal before I started welding it. I hope someone can give me some advice because I sure am :icon_confused:
 
Tiny holes like bubbles in the bead?

That usually comes from contaminants on the metal you're welding (rust, moisture, paint, dirt, grease/oil, etc.), or your shielding gas isn't shielding the weld correctly (insufficient flow, or the wind blowing it away while you're welding).

Are you welding outside in the open?
 
Yes like bubles in bead. I Have 30 cfm going and welding inside guess I didn't clean the old hunk of metal good enough. Its been a while since I welded so I might be the problem.
 
You do NOT need 30 cfm when welding inside....15-20 is more than enough
 
Check the torch assembly. Make sure that everything in the gun is properly setup, and that the hose is properly seated into the base unit. I know I was getting porous welds for a bit and I couldn't figure it out. The hose had actually pushed itself out from sealing inside machine just enough to cause the gas to leak out inside the machine.
 
Thanks for the advice. I turned up the CFM's to try and get a better weld i usually don't have it that high. I will check the lead to make sure nothing is wrong with it. I didn't think of that. I'll do that this weekend and we will see what happens.
 
What kind of welder do you have? I have a Millermatic 211. The clamp that holds the torch assembly into the machine needs to be really tight...like almost to the point of needing pliers to loosen it.
 
have a holbart 140 finshed welding today I guess it was not clean enough I cleaned the metal beter and no problems.
 
Rule of thumb with GMAW is that the metal can't ever be too clean. With SMAW its not as big of a concern but still important. The cleaner the base metal the easier it is to get a high quality weld.
 
check the polarity of your leads. its different for gas welding vs flux welding.
 
hey guys, I was welding a bumper on my car trailer but I keep getting holes in my weld bead. I'm using a MIG welder with solid wire and mix gas (75/25) I am using an old hunk of metal that I had laying around. I think it must have a galvanized coating on it because it is not rusty and has been sitting outside. I ground it down to shinny metal before I started welding it. I hope someone can give me some advice because I sure am :icon_confused:

Make sure that your mig weld is set up properly, if you haven't been welding for a long time do a couple practice routines until you get back on track with it. Also, make sure that you have a certain amount of gas to keep the weld clean.
 
Just like said before you can have to much gas. Also check for leaks. Im a :icon_welder: by trade and when i have used wire machines in the field i have run into quit a few leaks. Also that galvanized stuff can be tricky to weld it is some times looks like it is all ground off but isn't.
 

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