Wow... thanks for all the advice guys, some really good stuff in there...
takai - I will be linishing it when i'm done, just wondering how to make it look neater though before hand... more of a side note that one...
matty12 - I tried using the MIG on the spot weld setting just to basically spot it all up, but for some reason it didn't want to work... it made all the right noises, but the wire didnt' feed through, and to be honest, I didn't try acctually welding with it.. just pulled the trigger to test the pulse time, but there was nothing. don't remember hearing the gas either. I figured I could maually control the spots well enough (see end notes about this one)
Skiddz - starting out welding this kinda shit is hard... Owens welds might have looked like crap, but we've all done them, he just wasn't afraid to show them off...
oldeskewltoy - That's I can see your point there, But i question the fact that when you remove the pan from your dummy block it's just gonna warp anyway... but less so i guess because of heat dissipation...
af300e - Interested to see pics if you got them... I'd love to see pics of the gates, I have an idea for my gates, but as always, input would be awesome
RA23 - as per my reply to Matty12 regarding the spotting, as for wire diameter, I'm running 0.8mm atm, but I the welder can go to 0.6 if i need to... what thickness material is 0.6 good for? do I need a new gun at all?
manny - Thanks for that, will definately check it out
timbosaurus - I'm doing my very best to keep things clean and neat etc etc I managed to learn very early on that anything less then virgin metal isn't gonna weld... as for gas, i'm using Argoshield...
Normally i'd tack every few inches too maybe upto a foot apart if the strength in the plate is there, but with this stuff i've been trying to tack every 15-25mm apart, just tiny ones though. this in itself seems to be a fair challange...
I'm currently using the lowest voltage setting (don't know the value), and wire speed to suit, I tried cranking it up a notch to see if picking up travel speed helped with blowing holes, but i didn't get far with that, it blew holes almost straight away...
I might have a crack at test welding some of this sheet with the OXY, see how I go with that... it might be alright, because it's so thin i'll need to keep the speed up which might keep the heat out...
mullet - it's a SIP Ideal200 made in the mid 80's... made in London...
This afternoon I put more effort into getting a test weld to look nice and neat... Cleaned and prepped 2 pieces of sheet (not too small) about 30-40cm long... then I positioned them, used welding magnets to hold them in place on one side, and a thick piece of flat bar on the other side to act as a straight edge... I started tacking them together, and this is where the first of my problems start... I can (almost) never start cleanly with a weld... usually I start with the MIG wire resting on my work piece (tell me if this is bad) then pull the trigger, the thing just seems to jump, break the wire then i have to start again. anyways, managed to get it tacked up (reasonably) well, and it was still looking pretty straight... so I started doing stitches (waiting for the orange colour to fade between runs), vertical down as one of the guys from work suggested, and I managed to get 2 or 3 fillets about 20-30mm long looking quite respectable... but that was the end of that... from there on all the welds started looking worse, and it ended up blowing holes in almost all fillets after about 15mm... and back to that problem of not making a proper arc... I'm thinking that i'm having issues with my earth lead, it's just a spring clamp style (similar to a jumper lead) but its getting weak in it's old age, and isn't really clamping tight on thin sheet, i'll try again tomorrow with some thicker plate to sandwich the thin stuff...
bought an auto darkening helmet too... makes spotting alot easier...
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