I finally got a chance to run my first beads on my new welder. Actually, my first beads ever. When I discovered that the local community college classes were all full, I just opted to buy a basic welder and teach myself through trial and error and internet research. I had a 2-foot-long piece of 6" square tubing, 1/4" wall thickness, left over from a project a few years ago that I'm using to run stringer beads on for awhile just to figure out what the heck I'm doing. It's rusty, but I brushed it off fairly well on one side, so it doesn't look TOO bad. Arc is supposed to manage light rust OK, right (or am I wrong on that?)? I'm plugged in to a 240V outlet, BTW.
I bought 5 pounds each of Lincoln 3/32" 6011 and 3/32" 7018 from the Home Depot and ran some 6011 first. I started right in the middle of the range printed on the box, about 60-65 amps, then bumped it up to about 80 amps after a few rods. I tried 90 also, but that seemed too hot to me. It certainly was a quick learning curve, seeing what the puddle looked like, sounded like, felt like, trying to hold a tight arc, trying to keep up with is as the rod burned off, etc. As expected, I'm not maestro with my first rod! I was moving too fast horizontally and I was pushing rather than pulling, so I couldn't see the puddle real well. When I figured this out, and corrected both problems, it got MUCH better results, perhaps
All in all, I burned about a dozen rods. I was secretly hoping that I'd be able to make welds that looked like Jody's from weldingtipsandtricks.com, but I knew that wouldn't happen right away (or perhaps ever). I'm probably still using the wrong heat, difficult rod, and possibly a rod too small for this metal thickness. I'll post pictures when I get some, because I'd like whatever feedback you guys can offer to help me pick this up faster. There's definitely a level of art to it!
But, one thing was exactly as I suspected: it's hella fun and I'm really looking forward to getting better at this. Still have the grin on my face! I think I'll bust open the 7018 tomorrow to see what that looks/feels like. I figure once I can do decent welds by stick welding, I'll play with the TIG function on this machine (and I gotta go to the LWS to pick up a bottle anyway).
Thanks, y'all!


Reply With Quote
My instructor had been teaching welding for 40 years full time at the local college and he couldn't just turn his brain off and weld like a complete rookie. It was simply second nature for him after all those years. He used to tell us "I'm off surfing the Bahamas right now and I can almost close my eyes and weld by feel" (while he demo'd a new technique for 15 of us to watch). 

