One of the best videos about settings, thanks from germany
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Thanks! I appreciate that!
@psilocin67396 ай бұрын
Another great channel that's helped me learn to weld is called "making mistakes with Greg" I have no affiliation, just grateful for both of these channels.
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
He does a great job! I enjoy his channel as well.
@herrgerd16846 ай бұрын
Ha, that's the other channel I really like to watch as well
@andrewbradstreet42182 ай бұрын
Right!? He's bout my favorite. Him, and weldingtipsandtricks
@MattChase9076 ай бұрын
I'm in my last semester of college before graduating with a welding engineering degree. I really enjoy your videos. 👍
@rusty_restorations366 ай бұрын
It’s amazing how often a bad ground is significant when adjusting mig. I’ve seen lots of people chase setting or blame the machine, but their ground clamp looks like it went through a wood chipper in acid rain, then it’s stuck over millscale…
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Totally. Wire feed welding is more sensitive to a bad ground than other processes as well. Thanks for the comment!
@colemanmalstrom404624 күн бұрын
Excellent, clear, and detailed. It's like I'm sitting in your classroom!
@andyb40716 ай бұрын
Have you lost weight? You're looking good man
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Thanks! I was stuck on a long plateau, then recently changed my approach and I'm making some significant headway again. Feels great!
@ArcEyeJames6 ай бұрын
Lol seems like he did lose some weight for real
@betterwithrum6 ай бұрын
@@TimWelds can you please do a video on that? I’ve been on a plateau for a while now too
@Kunai_776 ай бұрын
Tf lol.
@tsl78812 ай бұрын
If you remember when Tim first started his channel , just like that young kid Chucky, his welds didn't look that great. He had all the process knowledge, but I guess he did not weld per se for a living, but a welding engineer. He looks really good now and has a fancy HTP welder now in his garage/studio... There are a lot of youtubers that have gotten better at what they are teaching and developed better video and communication teaching skills and have started charging for teaching.
@g.tucker86826 ай бұрын
Crystal clear as always
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@jvmiller19952 ай бұрын
I just found this channel and I must say very well explained. I have to check out some of your tig videos. That is my weakness. I am Okay at it but who wants to be okay. Lol I have welded mig and stick since about 1990. And I have worked in professional job shops many years. But I never really had a chance to learn it until the last 4 to 5 years when I picked up my 1st tig. I purchased a Everlast 221 sti. No looking back I love the machine. I wish I would of waited a year or so for the lighting with its easier to use interface. I do not weld every day but I have ran a lot of wire though it and it is the smoothest welding machine I have ever owned.
@tsl78812 ай бұрын
Tim a bunch of the new welders have a synergistic/auto mode. You didn't mention those. They adjust the wire speed with the voltage range complicating what is going on. My Lincoln has the chart, but my everlast does not, it has a synergic mode for Mig that shows the settings (not calibrated for flux core and they were " why do you want to use that for" snobs when i called). Since I don't uncover the welders but every month or two, on the farm, I prefer a chart. I need to make a chart for Tig too. I really like Tig brazing.
@TimWelds2 ай бұрын
The same principles apply with synergic settings, but I'm with you, I like to set the actual numbers.
@6Sally54 ай бұрын
Thanks Tim! I enjoy welding…I just don’t do it often enough to get very good at it. Your videos always are interesting and help me a lot.
@brandonideal14022 ай бұрын
Great video Tim. You are a good teacher of welding processes
@WaylonElstad5 ай бұрын
As a high school graduate about to head into job corp for welding, you are a godsend.
@matthew1992ya5 ай бұрын
This is the most helpful mig welding video out there
@Encryptus16 ай бұрын
I'm in Europe, so thank you for the metric. Took all your advices, some other content creators and real life people and bought a MMA/MIG/MAG 180A machine. Started welding today dispite investigating the matter for the three months prior. In my machine you can choose amperage, voltage and wire speed. So, you need to setup all of them, nothing is tied automatically to each other. I guess it's better that way for experienced users but a bit more difficult to get the hang of it for a begginer. The machine does not have a parameter chart and everything I find in significant detail is in inches 😢
@tsl78812 ай бұрын
I have a welder that doesn't have a chart. I hate that because, on the farm, i don't weld every week and I CRS.
@amcustomfab6 ай бұрын
Simple and digestible I love it. Keep up the great work. 😎
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Thanks Alex! Appreciate it!
@donaldhalls21896 ай бұрын
Always a pleasure to learn more ,thanks for sharing, all the best to you and your loved ones
@melgross6 ай бұрын
I like that you’re able to make things simple and clear. No muss, no fuss. By the way, how are you able to keep your table so new looking? You know I have the same one and there are reminders that I weld on it.
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Thanks! I get so many questions that can be solved with just a simple understanding of the basics, so I keep making the basics videos. The table looks a lot newer from a steep forward angle than it does from above. Because I do a variety of work, it doesn't get full time use, but I do use it quite a bit. Most of the actual fabrication work done directly on the table is TIG welded, which is pretty clean, but leaves a ton of little arc marks from grounding through the table. I do clean and oil it regularly and scrape the spatter any time I MIG weld on it.
@kylen19226 ай бұрын
Glad u did this video. I have a new miller that I have struggled with. I'm pretty sure I know what's wrong now.
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Awesome, so glad it helped!
@johnjabster22476 ай бұрын
Thank you tim best explanation ive seen yet can youbdo one on pulse spray also
@tomvandervoort24376 ай бұрын
Simple, clear explanation with good sample beads! The wire speed chart is great but could you include approximate voltage set points to go along with wire speed settings? Overall, super content. Thx!
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Thanks! A good online resource for voltage settings is the Miller website. Under resources, they have some weld calculators that will give some recommended settings based on material and thickness.
@jmank1216 ай бұрын
Great video per usual! Thanks brother. God bless
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Thanks! Appreciate it!
@Tetraden-a6 ай бұрын
Actually I was about to skip this one, because I don't have MIG set up and probably never will, but something left me watching and now I learned something very important for my flux core welding. Because I had the same problems there and obviously your tips apply do flux also. 😀
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Awesome! A lot of these fundamentals are the same across all wire feed processes.
@screations64915 ай бұрын
From India ❤
@michaelgonzalez88636 ай бұрын
Thank you
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
You're welcome! I appreciate the comment!
@tedbastwock38106 ай бұрын
You are a treasure, thanks 🙏
@herrgerd16846 ай бұрын
Really love your videos! I'm a bit odd regarding my welding "skills". I learnt TIG in my apprenticeship but never touched stick welding. I changed that a few weeks ago and it's FUN. Thank you for all your baiscs and settings videos! On another note: how do you film those arc shots? Phone/Cam behind an auto darkening lens/shiled?
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Thanks! I don't film through any sort of welding lens. It's all just camera exposure settings, though I do use an ND filter on my lens to bring the light level down into a better range for adjustment.
@ED_T6 ай бұрын
Excellent video!
@robertcaccavalla64696 ай бұрын
Great tutorial, thank you.
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@sammkablaam6 ай бұрын
Great video, man
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
@gregmonz6976 ай бұрын
Than ks Tim , very helpful .👍
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
Thank you! I appreciate it!
@tractortinkerer112 ай бұрын
great tutorial, but my machine has no digital readout to let you know what it is. Good information.
@smbathovhannisyan79146 ай бұрын
Good
@michelastegiano7442Күн бұрын
avec l'arrivée de tous ces postes MIG pas cher, c'est potentiellement une véritable catastrophe. Avec tous ceux qui s'improvisent soudeur. Avant en MMA les apprentis soudeur voyaient qu'ils faisaient de la merde. Alors qu'en MIG ils peuvent faire des soudures qu'ils trouvent " jolies" alors que celles ci sont nases. Ce que les gens ne veulent pas comprendre, c'est qu'en MMA c'est l'électrode qui commande dans une certaine plage d'intensité, alors qu'en MIG c'est l'épaisseur de la pièce qui fait la loi. Avec des postes MIG fonctionnant en 110 V ou 220 V on ne peut souder en MAX correctement que 7 ou 8 mm . D'ailleurs avec les postes synergique où le réglage de base peut être appelé avec comme critère l'épaisseur, aucun poste ne vous proposera des épaisseurs supérieures. En chat de poste MIG petit prix, il est vraiment nécessaire de prendre un MIG faisant aussi le MMA et d'avoir la sagesse de changer de procédé quant il le faut. En plus sur internet il y a plein de vidéo montrant des conneries. Alors qu'il n'y a pas de petites soudures, une mezzanine bricolée maison cela peut faire des morts quand cela s'effondre, idem avec un garde corps qui lâche, une remorque derrière une bagnole qui cède, et même avec une mauvaise réparation de bras brouette, si cela vous lâche lors d'une montée sur planche. Merci d'avoir fait une si belle démonstration car en plus quand on dit tout ça, souvent on nous prend pour des cons, genre que l'on voudrait faire les pro qui veulent les snober. with the arrival of all these cheap MIG stations, it is potentially a real disaster. With all those who become welders. Before in MMA, apprentice welders saw that they were doing shit. Whereas in MIG they can make welds that they find "pretty" while these are lame. What people don't want to understand is that in MMA it is the electrode which controls within a certain intensity range, whereas in MIG it is the thickness of the part which is the law. . With MIG stations operating at 110 V or 220 V, you can only correctly weld 7 or 8 mm at MAX. Moreover, with synergistic stations where the basic setting can be called with thickness as a criterion, no station will offer you greater thicknesses. In a low-cost MIG station, it is really necessary to take a MIG that also does MMA and to have the wisdom to change the process when necessary. Plus there are plenty of videos showing bullshit on the internet. While there are no small welds, a homemade mezzanine can cause deaths when it collapses, the same with a guardrail that breaks, a trailer behind a car that gives way, and even with poor repair of wheelbarrow arms, if it lets you down when climbing on a board. Thank you for giving such a great demonstration because what's more, when we say all that, people often take us for idiots, like we want to act like professionals who want to snub them.
@ahbushnell16 ай бұрын
Have you done a video on then steel TIG? I"m trying to weld .03" steel. It's hard. :
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
I haven't done one specifically on that thickness, but I have some 22g coupons that I could. What is the joint type? (outside corner, inside corner, butt) Fit is super important on thinner stuff and it's definitely something that takes some working up (or down) to. Also, if you have pulse on your machine, that can be a huge help. (I usually run 40% background, 40% duty cycle, 120 hz)
@ahbushnell16 ай бұрын
@@TimWelds I'm trying to build a 5 sided star. Making the arms at sendcutsend. They will bbend them also. So there are some somewhat greater then 90 degree joints. My attempt at welding some sample material was bad. I tried fusion, 1/16" lay wire. Not good. I should have done the test welding first. I'm supposed to get the parts tomorrow. i tried to send a picture but it doesn't work here. Thx
@ahbushnell16 ай бұрын
@@TimWelds Its 117 degrees
@ahbushnell16 ай бұрын
@@TimWelds My tests had poor fit. I'm going to 3D print a fixture. Hope that helps.
@ahbushnell16 ай бұрын
@@TimWelds I can do 40/40 and 50Hz. I think it helped. I did get some good fusion welds but I also got some blow through. The good ones had good fit. I'm thinking I may make some more arms with thicker material from sendcutsend.
@peterdavies18046 ай бұрын
What you are talking about Is "dip" your bacon thing,the next it "spray" which is a fizzing sound. The last is "globular" this is close to pulse MIG. Lots of heavy splatter.. Pp.s you should always "push" the arc not pull it.
@Sparky_D6 ай бұрын
Unless using flux core
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
I appreciate the comment. Short circuit transfer mode, represented by GMAW-S is the AWS standard term in the codes, but dip is a common name in other parts of the world. I understand the different transfer modes and have several in depth videos about them, but most viewers of this video won't be running spray, so I didn't overload the terminology. A push angle is important when running spray or pulse, but it's well established that either direction is acceptable for short circuit transfer mode, with a drag angle providing a slightly deeper penetration profile.
@fvrrljr15 күн бұрын
*COMO!?* *Pop Pop Pop...*
@DonaldTingle6 ай бұрын
I have a problem seeing my weld, no matter how much light I have. Hard to follow puddle when you can't see it. Have good quality helmet and visor.
@TimWelds6 ай бұрын
This is one of the most common problems, and I struggled with it too in the beginning. A magnifying cheater lens or reading glasses is helpful for some people. A good exercise to try is using soapstone to draw a few lines on a plate, then watch those high contrast lines as you weld. You can adjust your hood this way too, starting dark, then lightening it until you see the lines. A lot of it is just practice and repetition, which is a major part of the reason I recommend stacking beads on a plate. That exercise gets boring and once it gets boring, it's easier to notice things and start to see the puddle.
@DonaldTingle6 ай бұрын
@@TimWelds Thanks I've tried some of you suggestions, soapstone not yet.
@Gonzo813 ай бұрын
What helped me Don was to always get my head in a position where I can always see my puddle. That helped me alot especially welding around obstacles