I appreciate how you don’t try to hide when you make mistakes. So many youtube “experts” edit out every little slip up to act like they never mess up, which sets unrealistic expectations for those just learning. Thanks for your always informative videos.
@makingmistakeswithgreg4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the kind words 😀. The truth is when doing critical work I am capable of doing absolutely flawless welds. However I think people have a misconception of how taxing the focus is to do that. It’s simply not achievable on a general basis and displaying it as though I could do that all the time is not realistic. Don’t get me wrong, I have a phone full of perfect welds I have done, but when you weld a lot it’s not that hard to have some perfect ones. Again that’s not a reflection of reality. Especially in the repair business, nothing is flat and with perfect access infront of you. I have seen guys that are so fragile that they only post absolutely perfect weld pics, and even go as far as to tell people less than perfect looking welds on something they took a pic of aren’t theirs. I have had people criticize my welds many times on videos as well. I just laugh about it because anyone who welds a lot knows what a realistic average weld looks like and trying to suggest perfect welds should be the average is nonsense. Like you said, unrealistic expectations can be bad because beginners have no concept of what’s really going on. It’s funny you mentioned this too, because I am Currently editing 2 videos on things I screwed up 😅. They will be good for a laugh. Also completely relevant to being realistic.
@johnsimms81811 ай бұрын
Hey Greg love the video 47 years welding and loved everyday of it heat cold rain or sun all great days . If you're doing something you love it's not work.
@makingmistakeswithgreg11 ай бұрын
Thanks for the kind comment and thanks for your 47 years of welding service. I agree with your outlook on doing something you enjoy 😀
@AriesLanding Жыл бұрын
Damn Greg, I feel like if I could just do stuff like this every day I might could be happy. You make me look forward to welding school in August.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
Repairing stuff is a great feeling, far better than sitting in a office chair. Good for you on welding school. If you continue to watch videos online and put in the practice time, you’ll be doing real good for yourself in a short amount of time. Welding in itself doesn’t pay that well, fixing stuff does. Being able to weld cast iron, stainless, and aluminum will also improve the money you can make. It’s not hard to get to a very functional level with welding, like I always say “master the easy so the hard becomes possible”. Very few hobbies can pay for themselves and then some like welding can. Speaking of which I am going to do a mobile budget welding setup soon and break down the total costs so everyone understands what’s going on. I am sure you will find value in that 😀
@neilkratzer3182 Жыл бұрын
@Making mistakes with Greg first time here. I'm not saying I'm professional welder with all that knowledge but I have enough people to bring me stuff or go on the road. People think you need to spend a bunch of money to start but in reality you don't. I have less than $3000 in a whole outfit where I can weld almost any thing on site. Stick, mig, pulse mig(aluminum), and tig. Just showing people you don't need a fortune.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
@@neilkratzer3182 100% agree. The skill of the person matters so much more than the equipment. Certain tools can reduce the time it takes, but no tool can replace knowledge, experience, and skill when it comes to welding and fixing stuff. Sounds like you have the skills 😀
@1nvisible1 Жыл бұрын
*It's cut and bent because they got stuck going downhill out of a parking lot etc. The truck was longer than the hypotenuse of the ramp they drove down.*
@xanatax1844 Жыл бұрын
oooo, “Mobile Welding Kit” sounds like a great video! I’m technically “as mobile as my generator.” 😂 That “smallest, cheapest DC stick-welder in the world” situation is *super* portable! 💜👍
@jimmywilson1388 Жыл бұрын
YES, this is what I’m talking about brother! Don’t get me wrong I love the teaching videos but people also need to learn real life situations and realize they need to be good enough to do a job like this before they jump in head first… I’m not taking on any kind of structural welding jobs right now… So far I’ve worked on my friends little trailer that you pull behind a yard tractor, a new rack for my brother in law’s smoker, and welded the muffler back on a riding mower… Those Diablo carbide blades cut like butter…💪🏼 Thanks for the video man, keep ‘em coming!
@jimmywilson1388 Жыл бұрын
What’s your email address? I want to show you this grill rack I built… I feel like I did good and I owe a lot of my skills to you…👊🏼
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
Real life is definitely harder no doubt. I can sit and tig weld perfect welds on stainless pipe on a bench, now trying to put perfect welds on a exhaust system with 0 access is going to be tough. That’s why I always say master the easy, because it’s the only way the hard will become possible. Technically the repair in the video wasn’t hard, but if someone hasn’t mastered horizontal and flat plate welds it will be almost impossible. Glad to hear you’re knocking jobs out 👍👍. That’s the work that you learn the most 😀. And of course occasionally fail the hardest at lol.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
Weldingoldschool@gmail.com
@jimmywilson1388 Жыл бұрын
@@makingmistakeswithgreg I sent those pictures of the grill rack… Don’t laugh at my plywood table…😆 I’m working on making a welding table next…😂 That’s actually the fire box on a big smoker. I’m thinking maybe I should have put another cross brace in the middle. The reason the old one rusted out is because they welded it in there and it wasn’t removable… I’m gonna make so he can take it out and clean it…
@rich1953 Жыл бұрын
Since they are adjustable you might have been able to simply slide them out and weld them on a bench. The edges of the old piece that folded over on the sides could then be ground down flat leaving less of a gap.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
100% agree. By time I realized they weren’t integral to the unit I already had done a bunch of work. It’s always best to make a job easy on yourself anytime you can. I am still confused as to how those were damaged like they were lol.
@mkearn724 Жыл бұрын
Nice video Greg. I enjoy seeing real world everyday type of fixes. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and time
@DirtRoadLanding2 ай бұрын
Greg, your videos are awesome..Keep em coming!
@makingmistakeswithgreg2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the kind comment. I will keep rolling them out to help everyone out 😀.
@johngersna3263 Жыл бұрын
Good morning Greg. Outstanding video as usual. I'll be looking forward to the "Let's build it" videos. God bless and have a great day. 👍👍👍
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
Have a great day too 😀
@clintcowles7563 Жыл бұрын
Nice work man! I enjoy welding more than any other task I've ever taken part in. And!!! To this day, SMAW is still my favorite process!
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
I do like stick welding too. Works really good for how low tech it is 😀
@MrRobinson308 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video! Keep up the great work and real life information!
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words 😀. I have a few totally realistic welding situation videos coming out soon. Fixing/building stuff is the fun part of knowing how to weld 😀
@retirementhobbyfarmdiyadve1511 Жыл бұрын
Nice video. Good to see how do a job with basic tools. Look forward to more such videos.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
I will be having a bunch out in the future. I have a few more videos to cover on the basics of MiG welding and then it will be far more “let’s build stuff” and less of “how to build stuff”. Everything from roll cages to fire pits, axles to railing repairs. 😀
@retirementhobbyfarmdiyadve1511 Жыл бұрын
@@makingmistakeswithgreg anything that shows how to use basic tools is helpful. I’m a hobbyist with some equipment, most of it basics. Thanks for the videos.
@jimcaf57 Жыл бұрын
Nice work!! thanks for the video
@DG-fn7qg6 ай бұрын
I wish you had more welding repair videos posted because you're an excellent welder.
@makingmistakeswithgreg6 ай бұрын
I have probably 4 hours of content regarding repairs at my new job that I am sorting through right now. I have been doing a lot of heavy equipment repairs and will definitely have content on that. I just have to get through testing gloves and a few welders and I can start publishing that content 😀
@DG-fn7qg6 ай бұрын
@@makingmistakeswithgreg AWESOME! Thanks for the heads-up! Looking forward to it. Curious to know how someone would go about knowing what grade(?) of steel they are welding on? I'm thinking heavy equipment has to be some hard stuff, yet somewhat flexible as not to crack/break.
@CALDues7 ай бұрын
Wireless ground clamp 😊 if I had a nickel for every time I ...
@jasonchampion9932 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your time!💯✌️
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
You’re welcome 😀
@nickwhite6717 Жыл бұрын
Side note on the wear presented, if it has a tail lift, its possible thats when pulling vehicle's, going up driveways, backing up to tows etc, over time they do wear out. A lot i see have 10-12 mm bits of plate say 2x6 inches at the lowest point. Makes it easily replaceable and prevents wear on more structural parts. Great vid btw
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
That makes total sense. There seems to be a general trend with the tow truck drivers I fix stuff for, and that’s wearing things completely out 😅. I hit the point where people come to me before there is nothing left, it’s far easier to make things better when it’s not 90% gone lol.
@thegarbagegladiators4735 Жыл бұрын
Now all I need is a stick welder and get to work LOL. Great video man. I watched every minute of it you can film a video like this everyday and I'll watch it
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
I will have a bunch more repair videos in the future. I am in the process of editing 10 or so videos I have and then I will be going mobile and focusing on a lot of repair type videos. 😀
@thegarbagegladiators4735 Жыл бұрын
@@makingmistakeswithgreg thats awesome.i feel I can learn from you. Your a teach I can understand. I'll watch them all.
@markdeitchman8938 Жыл бұрын
very helpful. thanks
@scrapperstacker8629 Жыл бұрын
Great video thanks for sharing.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
You’re welcome, thanks for watching 😀
@BMGProjects Жыл бұрын
Good job
@williamwalters3796 Жыл бұрын
That slag peel was 👌 *chefs kiss*
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
It was 😀
@reedsmetalworks6664 Жыл бұрын
Good channel you have going.👍
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
Thanks 😀
@TalRohan4 ай бұрын
the weird run on those rods is probably to do with the welder rather than anything you did, its just a thing with cheaper welders that they always seem to have a sweet spot or range within wht they say they do that works much better than anything else, You did what works and found a way round it. Overall nice job and it looks really good, sound clean welds
@makingmistakeswithgreg4 ай бұрын
Thanks 😀. It definitely pays to know exactly how a welder runs. You’re right, most welders do have a particular sweet spot and when you’re outside of it things aren’t quite right.
@BobWolford-q2b Жыл бұрын
Good slag peel there, so you got arc length and travel speed on the nose
@anonymousguy4860 Жыл бұрын
That can also happen from overloading and tipping the truck side to side. Maybe loading a heavy truck on a road shoulder.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
Interesting, I never thought of that, and it makes sense. The tow truck guys I know are well known to overload, and they buy their trucks well used to start off with 😅. Entirely possible lol
@Liazon098 Жыл бұрын
Super inspirational
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
I will have more hands on job videos coming out now that I have a new workshop and some jobs rolling in. I like teaching but fixing stuff is far more fun 😀
@BobWolford-q2b Жыл бұрын
Just my opinion- I think I would have done the whole thing with 1/8 7018- lower amps, easier on the welder, basically same result. May have to run another pass or two, however.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
I agree, definitely a viable option. My dynasty welder has a easier time running 5/32 rods and filling a big gap, it can produce more than enough voltage. I think the 225 titanium was on the edge of what voltage it could supply at the amperage I was running. It ran flat fine but horizontal with a slight arc gap due to the gap was a bit much. 7018 1/8th ram like butter, definitely would have been less frustrating.
@georgesimpson311311 ай бұрын
if that part comes off why not just remove it, weld it, then put it back on? I think your rod angle is off... should have pointed into what you are welding. Also I find if I attach the ground to the vice grips I get a better ground. I think it's because the teeth bite into the metal. 5/23 7018's tend to want a bit more power than you'd think. At least it does with me.
@anthonymarino4260 Жыл бұрын
thanks for the education
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
You’re welcome 😀
@usernamemykel Жыл бұрын
Hey, Greg - what's the ASIN number for Amazon's wireless ground??????????????? Best2u, Mike
@usernamemykel Жыл бұрын
😁😁🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@jimmywilson1388 Жыл бұрын
Hahaha that had me rolling… I did the same thing the other day and I was like wtf is wrong with this thing…😆 I was totally baffled for like 20 seconds…🤣
@stevelawrencejr7723 Жыл бұрын
Steve L Lawrence Jr Durant, Oklahoma. I've watched your videos, and they've helped me practice flex core welding when I can borrow a welder to practice with. I would love to be entered in your giveaway. Thanks for the videos, and keep them going.
@1sourcemechanical240 Жыл бұрын
Great video Greg, Do you disconnect the truck batteries before welding on vehicles?
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
If I am welding far away from any electronics and can ground right next to the area I am welding on I dont disconnect the battery. Even with with battery disconnected you can still short through something like a ECM if you have a poor path between your ground clamp and your rod/wire. A great example of this would be welding on a front fender while clamped to the frame of a truck. If the ECM is in the kick panel (like 80s vehicles) you could inadvertently send power through it as part of the ground path. Disconnecting the battery won't hurt, but pulling the ECU harness off the ECU or atleast its fuse is far better.
@LoBeau5311 ай бұрын
The piece that you welded to was t he top flange of the original tubing. I don’t understand why you didn’t cut it off the vertical struts and weld the new tubing directly to them. Maybe I an missing something that you saw and I didn’t
@makingmistakeswithgreg11 ай бұрын
There is a easy reason for that: time. To completely cut off both vertical struts on both sides square, in a manner that it leaves minimal gap to reattach a new piece, would have taken a lot longer. It is also far stronger to leave that piece that was left and weld onto it. There was nothing wrong with the factory welds and it didn’t make sense to cut them off.
@AXNJXN1 Жыл бұрын
Excellent vid Greg! Thanks for taking us along on this job, showing us what doesn't and does work. My only question is why not use 6010 all the way around?
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
6010 would have been a solid option 100%. I just didn’t have any rods bigger than 1/8th, and due to low deposition rates I figured I would run out of 6010s before the job was up lol. The 5/32 7018 rods were perfect for the outside corners of the tubes. For the rest of it having some gaps made it way harder with 7018 over 6010.
@richardburns3048 Жыл бұрын
I see you had to weld directly to the vehicle. I have a job where I want to weld a couple of chain grabs to a box blade on my tractor. The tractor dealer said don’t weld with it on the tractor to prevent “frying” the electrical. I can see that there might be many occasions to weld on a vehicle or piece of equipment. Could you comment on if this is a problem or any precaution one might have to take before welding? Thanks. Any advice could save some “bad” outcomes if possible.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
Great question, I will definitely need to tackle this in a future video. For now here are some thoughts: Welding generally operates at low voltage (10-30 volts) and high amperage (50-200 amps). Vehicle electrical systems also operate on similar principals at slightly lower values (voltage is 12-15 and amperage is often 5-50 amps). There is genuine risk of shorting out electronics while welding near them because they aren’t designed to handle to the voltage and more importantly the amperage that welding operates at. In a tractor or a vehicle the frame/body/etc act as a wire to conduct electricity through. Electricity follows the path of least resistance, and in the case of a big hunk of steel it will follow multiple paths. If you put a welders ground clamp (regardless of polarity) on a piece of metal and there is some form of resistance between it and the welding arc, the electricity can flow in alternative paths to what you would think. A easy example would be you grounded to a engine to weld on a intake and it’s rubber isolated to the frame. The electricity may flow through a engine to frame ground cable, but without one of those it could attempt to flow through something like a ECU/computer ground wire off of a sensor which could destroy that wire and the computer. On the truck in the video everything is 1/4in steel or thicker, all of the controls are hydraulic, and other than the tail lights nothing is electrical in the back of the truck. By making sure to have the clamp on a solid ground on what I was welding, the probability of the electricity using ecu or sensor wires is virtually nothing. They are simply too far away and the heavy steel is far better of a path for current to take. If I was welding on the front or anywhere near a computer/wiring harness I would likely disconnect the computer because the risk isn’t worth it. By simply disconnecting the computer the wires can’t be used as a path for electricity to flow which will save the wire and obviously the computer. The best solution to welding on anything with a existing electrical system is to disconnect the battery (which won’t actually isolate the computer completely) pull the computer fuse, put your ground clamp as close as possible to what your welding, and make sure the clamp is attached to clean/solid surface. If you do that odds are you will be safe. It’s completely impractical to remove everything off a vehicle just to weld it, auto body repair would be impossible. You just have to be smart about it and do what you can to mitigate the risks.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
Also, surprisingly enough many tractor dealers have very little knowledge of electricity and welding in general. I know this because I have done specialty jobs for a few of them as far as welding is concerned. The advice of don’t weld it on the tractor isn’t bad (it can’t possibly destroy anything on the tractor when it’s not attached) but sometimes that may be impractical. Again it goes back to being smart about it.
@miketubeu Жыл бұрын
Nice video as usual. Got the tools, youtube knowledge 🧠, but not the skills yet😬. Sold a broken lawn aerator that needed welding😆.
@JeffWok Жыл бұрын
Never welded before but I've been watching his videos for a while, someday I hope to make an aerator. Excellent channel.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
With about 40 hours of practice on some plates you could do exactly what I did. Flux core wire would have been even easier. Definitely doable for you 😀
@DavidPineault8 ай бұрын
Is there a danger of welding a closed steel chamber where the heated air creates a large pressure potential?
@makingmistakeswithgreg8 ай бұрын
When welding shut a pipe or square tube you will develop pressure. Normally what can happen is the last bit of weld can “blow out” as you cover it. This is very common on roll cage tubing with tig, far less common with thicker tube with stick. The actual pressure build up is minimal at best. The main danger with pressure is if you weld on something that contains flammable materials.
@xanatax1844 Жыл бұрын
This is an awesome video! Love seeing the challenges of a “real world” job! 💜
@jadeolin8514 Жыл бұрын
Great video, thank you for posting. I'm curious how you go about billing a job like this. Im trying to get into doing work like this on the side but have never done custom work like this other than favors for friends/family. Any advise you might have on charging for custom welding services would be greatly appreciated.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
That's a great question, and something I will cover in depth in a future video. Since I don't have the video up now, I will give you some thoughts: Pricing stuff is hard, welding is the easy part. Much like any person with skills people will pay for, you obviously know how to do a repair but you don't know how to price things/run a business. That's perfectly normal because they are two completely different things. From a business side (legit or unlicensed "back yard" side hustle) you need to understand how to charge, and how much. Lets use a simple example, a repair job hits your lap to put a bid on, and it will take you 4 hours to do it (your estimation). A fully licensed shop estimates it as a 2 hour job, and estimates 200$ cost. You might be tempted to charge the same rate as the shop (100$ a hour) but then you would be doubt what their estimate is, and you're not likely to get the job. You could also charge 50$ a hour and come out at the same price of 200$ but youre "making less money". The truth is, your cost to do the job and a shops cost are completely different. A legit shop has a lot of overhead (likely 20-40$ a hour worth of overhead) that you simply dont. They also have better tools/more experience which allows them to do more jobs in a day (aka faster). So even though their hourly rate is high, their bill is fairly low because of the speed in which they work. Back to your situation. If your costs are low (no insurance, legit business costs, low overhead) you can make more money at 30$ cash with no taxes than a legit business might at 80+. ITs not what you make its what you can keep. As a starting point I would look at 30$ a hour cash plus materials. If its a job that takes a bunch of skill, closer to 40-45 cash. If its a stupidly easy job that takes no work, 25$ a hour cash. Those are in the ballpark in northern states, they may be less in southern states. Keep in mind to get a accurate rate you need to take all your monthly expenses, and divide them into a hourly cost. Take that number and add it to what a reasonable welder pay is (15-30$ a hour depending on location). That is your "rate" that you should be shooting for. It doesn't make sense to weld for someone for less money that you can make somewhere else, if you are looking to do a lot of work. I do a ton of "side work" for straight cash, and my hourly rate is somewhere between 25 and 80 a hour, based on how much I want to do it, how much skill is involved, and who I am doing it for. That is a crazy range, but because I work for cash, I turn far more money than if I was "legit". If I was a licensed business I couldn't touch a single job for under 70$ a hour. Right now insurance cost is 2.5$ a hour (40hr week, 4 weeks a month) alone. Add it commercial mortgage for a building or expensive truck payment, (12.5$ a hour), tools (5-10$ a hour) and youre talking upwards of 25$ a hour actual cost (plus tons of additional stuff). So a realistic number would be around 35-40$ a hour is expenses. Well at 70$ a hour your making 30-35 a hour for doing all the work and running the business, which does not include health insurance, retirement, etc. You can see why many businesses charge over 100$ hour. So basically what I am saying is if you don't have huge expenses and aren't a "legit" business, you should be looking at 30-40 a hour as a target, plus materials. If you make 25 cash per hour for a easy job, your ok, but shoot for 30-40. In most states as a side hustle I wouldn't take less than 25 unless its a friend of family.
@jadeolin8514 Жыл бұрын
@@makingmistakeswithgreg wow, thank you for the detailed reply. That pretty much sums up what I needed to know, at least to get started. What welding skills I possess pertain to just mig at the moment as it's all I've ever really done, but I'm trying to learn stick and tig so I can tackle a wider range of jobs, but that will likely be quite a bit further down the road. I'm hoping I can do enough side work with my little mig that I can afford better equipment and progress into better higher paying jobs. I really appreciate the time and information.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
No problem. You can do a ton with MiG and you can definitely make enough money to pay for better equipment. It might sound ridiculous, but focus on being able to make the straightest, most consistent welds with your setup while you practice. The better you can MiG weld the faster you will be able to pickup other welding. Make sure you practice both flux core and gas shielded MiG, wire welding is very versatile when you add flux core in the mix. Most of my side hustle money comes from doing repair work others can’t, aka cast aluminum, stainless, one of a kind headers, cast iron repairs, etc. I also do a lot of repair work on tow trucks which is 3/8th + steel and often high strength steel. Although a lot of those things you can’t easily do with a MiG machine, you can do a ton of repair jobs in field with the help of flux core wire. Flux core wire is far easier to do a trailer repair with than stick. You also have the ability to weld super thin material too. So focus on doing quality work, and focus on doing things people need done that are hard for the average person. You will get there, just build the skills, the confidence, and ability. Take pictures of quality work and use them to show what you do. Money will come your way. Also, always call people back, and call them when you say you will.
@JesseWright685 ай бұрын
Nice boots. What are they?
@makingmistakeswithgreg5 ай бұрын
I have worn thorogood heritage moc toe boots for 14+ years, that’s pretty much all I wear. That particular boot is made in Wisconsin (3 hours from me) and last a long time. Check out their site, Google “thorogood” and they will come up. Not all are made in the USA but their heritage are. You can get them in a ton of colors including all black 😀
@colinhudson3723 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for another great vid . I'm struggling on a job where I struggled to get hinges welded . Used 6013 but for some reason just couldn't get decent welds onto the hinge ( 30mm hinges ) . I guesing its the steel composition ? That and constant power tripping on site made it a nightmare job . Trying to lipstick on a pig..lol . One of those million dollar homes that just want to patch shiit 🤦
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a nightmare job lol. Jobs like that if possible I would run flux core wire. Flux core is infinitely easier to weld uphill with, and out of position compared to stick. 6013 is not a rod I particularly like to run uphill. I find that 6010 or 7018 are far easier (still no way as easy as flux core wire). Something you were welding on may have been galvanized/zinc treated, or treated with some other anti rust layer. This can make it weld terribly. Sometimes the setup or material is just wrong and will make a day out of a hour job. I tend to find a way around that any way possible but if you can’t it’s going to be tough.
@colinhudson3723 Жыл бұрын
@@makingmistakeswithgreg I tried fluxcore but couldn't get the tip in far enough to get a good weld . Just a very awkward set up . I need to get some 6010 . It took about a hour to find a decent spot to weld on as where the steel looked solid it was rusted in the post and would just blow out. Joys of onsite repairs..lol
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
@@colinhudson3723 definitely use 6010 for that. The 5p+ grey rods will have a bit more liquid puddle, the red rods will probably do a bit better for you (faster puddle freeze). Field work always sucks in comparison to bench work lol. That’s why I laugh at guys who say “I could do a better weld” as they sit at a bench with clean material and the ability to position it anyway they want. Doing a halfway decent weld out of position in the field is way harder lol.
@rich1953 Жыл бұрын
From your accent I assumed you were in Wisconsin, worked there one winter on power lines, froze my uh huh off, said I would NEVER go back. License plate gave it away.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
😅 yeah it’s cold up here for sure. When I was younger I didn’t mind the cold but as of the last 5 years I am miserable once winter hits. I am planning on buying some land down in Tennessee/Kentucky soon and doing what I can to avoid the cold lol.
@rich1953 Жыл бұрын
I'm in SC but suggest NC for temp and humidity. @@makingmistakeswithgreg
@TheJessiepacheco1992 Жыл бұрын
What machine is that I was surprised that your welder does 6010
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
It’s a harbor freight titanium 225, it will weld with 6010 no problem. Best sub 300$ stick welder I have ever used.
@scottyhankemeier9380 Жыл бұрын
I think they slam those on the ground and back up to the truck/car to tow it.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
You could be right. I didn’t screw with the flatbed part, but those didn’t move with the hydraulic arm/claw. If those legs/bumpers drop as part of the flat bed it would make sense. I still don’t know why the ones that were on it were cut/bent the way they were with the bottom flapping in the breeze lol. The owner didn’t seem to know why either. I like tow truck owners though, they always pay in cash, don’t argue about the price, and everything is always thick steel that’s easy to weld lol. I swear they can break anything though lol.
@williepelzer384 Жыл бұрын
I would have asked the customer why it wore off that way, what if the two inch lower doesn't let the bed go low enough?
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
The owner of the truck bought it a few months prior and it was like what was shown in the video. I never put the roll back bed down but the whole way that was cut or wore down made no sense to me lol. I work with a lot of wore out tow trucks and such but if that was due to scraping on the ground I am pretty surprised how bad it was lol.
@lilbfrom614 Жыл бұрын
How much did this job pay?
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
I charged 200$ plus a taco dinner. A reasonable rate would be somewhere between 130 and 230$. That’s a wide spread but it really depends on where a person lives and their costs.
@slowb4lls19 ай бұрын
Good thing you had them broom 🧹 handle 5/32nds with you. Imagine rolling up with some 3/32nds like yea ima knock this thing out, you wudda made 2 trips to a welding shop for sticks 😂. Yea this looked not that bad tho, good job bossman. Woulda helped out if I had Tha facking ground connected aye? Lmao
@armedmariner Жыл бұрын
Could you fill that gap with a piece of rod placed into gap and then run a wave pattern to form a full gap fill? I’m no expert. Just asking.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
So the common name for that is Texas tig. It can be done but I am not a huge fan of it. It would have worked in the situation, but the risk is poor penetration, porosity, and a weld with unknown strength. Not a big issue in the particular situation In the video, but definitely not something you want to do when welding something that needs strength lol.
@armedmariner Жыл бұрын
@@makingmistakeswithgreg thanks for the lesson - and naming that - since I’ve seen it done a few times. I’ll be sure to be careful if I use it to only use it for non structural welds.
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
@@armedmariner it definitely can be a life saver when faced with real rusty material and no way to patch it properly. Common for dumpsters, and just overall poor condition material with gaps. Mig and flux core wire welding is far more forgiving on filling gaps than stick, but more people have/use stick for poor material. When you have no choice it will solve a otherwise unsolvable problem lol. Definitely practice a bit with it to get a feel. You can use a bare 7018 rod (with the flux knocked off) like the filler in tig, or you can put the rod in the gap and weld over it. I will actually do a video where I Texas tig some stuff and do a cut/etch, it will be interesting to see what’s inside lol.
@armedmariner Жыл бұрын
@@makingmistakeswithgreg I’d vote for a video on Texas TIG where you cut and etch to show penetration. Seems very viable. But how strong?
@robertogutierrez3593 Жыл бұрын
Does that harbor freight run 6010 well ?
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
Yes it does surprisingly. I don’t think there is a better sub 400$ welder for 6010.
@wellshodgarage2752 Жыл бұрын
Is this a 110 v stick from harbor freight?
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
It’s the titanium 225 from harbor freight. 110v stick welders generally only output 70-90 amps which makes it tough to weld 1/4in steel. The titanium 225 can run on 110 but only at 70 amps output ☹️
@Lou-eye5 ай бұрын
I forget that dang grd clamp alot, memory aint worth a hoot.
@makingmistakeswithgreg5 ай бұрын
It takes about 4-5 attempted arc strikes before you realize what’s going on lol.
@aa999xyz Жыл бұрын
What about hardened steel like a cutting-edge much like a loader bucket would have they could wear away without destroying things?
@makingmistakeswithgreg Жыл бұрын
Are you talking about welding a worn loader edge? I have done a bunch of those, generally you build them up with hardface rods. 😀