As a career welder/fabricator who has welded more alloys than most people have seen or heard about. Why am I watching this..? Oh right, Matt
@jeremyhanna3852 Жыл бұрын
Same here I got welds in outerspace
@erikdude666 Жыл бұрын
@@jeremyhanna3852 Samesies!
@jeremyhanna3852 Жыл бұрын
Yeah I got 200 yards of welds on the tituaim base of the hubble took over a month tituaim and nititaim suck
@jeremyhanna3852 Жыл бұрын
@erikdude666 I think I also sign a non disclosure to not talk about nitituaim It's a mix of nickel and tituaim that nasa says don't exist when I worked on parts with it there was armed security there
@MissingData_ Жыл бұрын
at this point i just watch whatever he puts out, did i learn anything? nope, did i have a great time anyway? Yup! I dont got any welds in space tho... hahah
@DestroyersGarage Жыл бұрын
wasn't in a class but was welding some stainless on a jobsite and this oldtimer (not even working just having a look at his friend's future office) walks up, stops me, twists my wrist to a different angle and says "now weld properly" 30% improvement to my welds. thanks, wise old timer.
@oShadowkun9 ай бұрын
Wow, sounds like a guy that knows his shit but never learned how to properly interact with people. Glad you got something out of it!
@snorttroll43798 ай бұрын
Depends
@Verethill188 ай бұрын
Hope you had a proper air fed mask for that
@seanyounk17 ай бұрын
@@oShadowkun Agreed. Hilarious!
@jerbear79526 ай бұрын
@@oShadowkun more than one person "rough teaching" has experience my "rough learning". Oops I dropped it, oooooh did that soldering iron get you. Oh im so sorry Clumsy me
@arielgaralnick9279 Жыл бұрын
I did a welding course and for some reason ended up talking to three different teachers there . Each one of them told me to do thing totally differently from each other , which was a bit confusing at the beginning. The coolest thing was watching them weld in completely different ways but always having amazing results.
@edwardfletcher7790 Жыл бұрын
The one thing they all agree is, stop/start is VERY limited quality welding !
@ImBarryScottCSS Жыл бұрын
This is the sign of an artform. Welding is a craft like cooking is a craft. Yes there is science behind it but the act of doing it comes down to the artistry of the person.
@FurryWrecker911 Жыл бұрын
This sounds like art school, but more blue collar than white collar. I once derailed our finals class for 15 minutes because I asked the simple question "can I put a drop shadow behind my 3D model when doing a beauty shot?" and all 4 instructors went to war on whether drop shadows were tacky or tasteful. Eventually one of the teachers said "I'm overriding this. I will grade it. Keep the shadow. Next student."
@soncero7398 Жыл бұрын
@@ImBarryScottCSS it reminds me more of Chinese alchemy
@johnsykes706 Жыл бұрын
As an adequate approaching proficient welder (mostly aluminium) there are five core things I know: 1. If you can't see you can't weld. 2. Don't chase the weld, if you feel that you can't keep up you're running too hot, stop, and start again with less amps. 3. Be patient setting up your weld pool whilst ensuring adequate penetration. Otherwise you will end up referring to point two. 4. There is art in the science, results are what matters, once the basics are met your personal "style" counts. 5. Use your skills or practice often, TIG welding requires skills up keep, if you don't use it you lose it and there is always a better weld out there to show off.😊
@kevinmurphy3464 Жыл бұрын
“Like any good welder, I blame the equipment”. Classic line and this guy is great. Laid back and self-effacing during his video which covered a lot of great info for the laymen.
@RonCovell Жыл бұрын
Excellent video, Matt. I love your low-key and (sometimes) self-deprecating humor - mixed with, good, solid technical information. You clearly hit the points that most beginning welders struggle with.
@xelaxander Жыл бұрын
Eyyyy, you certainly doesn’t have any welding issues. Also Matt would be great in motorizing your creations!
@SuperfastMatt Жыл бұрын
Thanks, Ron!
@wookieecantina Жыл бұрын
When Ron Covell watches your video, well, you've made it! Ron is amazing.
@rickmellor Жыл бұрын
Anytime I see Ron pop up in the comments of a channel I follow I feel a deep sense of validation that my tastes are on point. 😎
@jonathangehman4005 Жыл бұрын
@@rickmellorUnfortunately he's usually correcting some dumb shit I wrote in the comments. Whenever I see his name I grit my teeth and brace myself. Ron's the real deal
@danlearned6199 Жыл бұрын
Matt, As a gearhead and fabricator I've been enjoying your exploits for some time now. A comment about the laser cut steel parts. As a part of my 30 years as a certified aerospace welder, I"ve worked directly with the engineers in the material engineering depts. We've found that what appears to be a clean cut at the edge of laser cut parts there is a thin oxidized layer left over from the laser. If welded as cut, there is a narrow band of a porous and brittle weld left behind. Verified via x rays of finished welds. There are some SAE studies verifying the same under high powered electronic microscopes. Up close, that narrow band looks like a sponge!!! Just a few moments dressing those laser cut edges results in a uniform solidly fused weldments. Just a light pass with an abrasive. Doing this you'll see some the grinding 'dust' is hard and crunchy, evidence of the oxidation and porosity. When terminating a weld, chopping the current all at once leaves the dreaded dimple or divot caused by the rapid cooling, shrinking of the weld puddle. Close microscopic inspection shows there are numerous spider web stress cracks radiating from the middle of the 'dimple/divot'. The technique to eliminate this is...at the end of the weld, slowly back off (pedal) the current but while the puddle is still molten, add just a tiny droplet of filler to cap the shrinking puddle then slowly back down the current while moving the torch in small circular motions. Don't forget to keep the inert gas flowing until the weld has totally cooled. I've seen top notch chrome moly tube race cars (top fuel dragsters) with every single weld terminated with the dimpled puddle, a disaster in the making. Even pre welded kit plane frames I've seen exhibiting the same. Everyone knows that 'big cracks' emanate from 'little cracks'. Why take the chance?? I'm surprised this issue isn't covered better in most all welding tutorials. Go figure???
@sibalogh Жыл бұрын
I'm glad I read your comment coz I noticed when I was practicing with TIG that "dimple" is a common appearance unless you know how to get rid of it. Even with conventional welding methods to make sure the end cracks are eliminated using runout plates on both ends if possible. In pipe welding, they always recommended using a grinder before restarting. In your line of work, I guess those methods are out of the question, eh?
@Maxol787 Жыл бұрын
bro wrote a book
@thewoodsarecalling8382 Жыл бұрын
@danlearned6199 This type of comment makes youtube better. Inviting thought and curiosity.
@filipemorais4708 Жыл бұрын
Nice explanation! But, What if the machine has no pedal? What's the procedure to end the weld?
@creepygangster Жыл бұрын
There are welding machines that have an adjustable shutdown ramp, where you can choose what your arc and gas do once you let go of the button. So the gas continues for a set time and the current decreases in its set time. If your machine doesn't have these settings you should get yourself a pedal.
@michaelbradley7529 Жыл бұрын
It's been said that practice makes perfect, when in reality it's practicing with good technique that makes perfect. Big props for taking a class and increasing your knowledge base.
@everolomus Жыл бұрын
Somebody once told me that perfect practise is what makes perfect
@Allazander Жыл бұрын
Personal instruction from an experienced welder is much better than just watching videos to learn from. Having someone there to point out your mistakes or poor technique is invaluable and can save you from ingraining a bad technique.
@michaelbradley7529 Жыл бұрын
@@Allazander Absolutely right.
@rickwoud4319 Жыл бұрын
and increasing OUR knowledge base
@thecheetahman22 Жыл бұрын
I had an old teacher that preferred the saying "Practice makes permanent" and I tend to agree
@chrisallen2005 Жыл бұрын
One item I rarely hear addressed in welding videos is the use of magnifying lenses. I lived in a state of denial or ignorance until I used a magnifying lens to aid my aged eyes. The difference in my welding quality was profound. Give it a try.
@TheRolfFR Жыл бұрын
Okay frenchman speaking, Chartreuse is the name of a mountain range in southeastern France. It is more famous as the name is used by a French herbal liqueur made by monks since 1737. The liquor is green as your electrodes. If you are curious, you can find some importers in the US, it's 55%ABV and already quite pricy in France where I live next to the factory.
@zorktxandnand3774 Жыл бұрын
-Have you seen God? No -Here have our 55% herbal liquor and try again please.
@allareasindex7984 Жыл бұрын
Is it related to Chartre?
@ShotGunner5609 Жыл бұрын
Very informative. Thank you Monsieur!
@GingerTwiglet Жыл бұрын
Drink enough and you get to see through time.
@Misterfairweather Жыл бұрын
In my misspent youth I used to mix it with hot chocolate and serve it at parties..
@piotrlasota92448 ай бұрын
Hi Matt (and whoever might be watching the tungsten preparation part)! Just one important remark on grinding tungsten. Those expensive tools are not expensive because they're fancy but because they insulate you from the tungsten particles getting grinded off the rod. Those are super harmful to your health. I remember when I studied mechanical engineering and we had welding classes the prof. was super insistent on "Guys for the love of life never grind those on a bench grinder, it's about your own health!" and it stuck with me.
@andrewford806 ай бұрын
Good to know, thank you
@ryanj6103 ай бұрын
Yeah you don't want to breath the powder. But also, you don't really want to breath while welding, hah. If you're in it for a career, get a rebreather.
@Evilslayer733 ай бұрын
preparation is 95% of the results :)
@bobpowers9862 Жыл бұрын
My favorite comment was about the 240v outlet. "In that case, this was already here". Nice.
@stevejones4819 Жыл бұрын
I was an industrial welder for years and your information should be very useful to many people but what made me hit like was the humorous delivery. Well done.
@jon8706 Жыл бұрын
Don't spend 10 minutes grinding that ball of steel off your tungsten. Clip it off with side cutters then chuck the tungsten in your drill. You'll get a more symmetric cone at the end of you electrode with a drill spinning it. Don't run the drill too fast, you want the scratches on the end of the electrode to be pointed towards the tip.
@Agouti Жыл бұрын
I'm a serial dipper. It takes at most 10s to grind a good tip with a bench grinder, half that if you are doing it a lot. A drill is totally unnecessary.
@LordHolley Жыл бұрын
I agree, take several tungstens, get your drill out, get ten to twenty of them ready, and get to work.
@davidfarmer Жыл бұрын
Youll fracture your tungsten kid
@patricksawesomeprobarly3331 Жыл бұрын
Yeah don’t do that just grind it away but I don’t know shit
@The-truth-is-valuable. Жыл бұрын
I have made some amazing "rivets" from bolts, to be used in my steel projects this way. It works very well.
@GHOST.GARAGE Жыл бұрын
The before and after on the welds is impressive ,I took a 2 year welding course along with a welding job, learnt everything under the moon about welding and id say that you summarized the most important parts very well.
@Sonny_V Жыл бұрын
Never thought Welding Class would be this entertaining
@lagartogrande1908 Жыл бұрын
Boilermaker here. 30 years experience welding pressure vessels. Good video. Having your welds x-rayd is great incentive to get it right.
@shadetreemetalworks Жыл бұрын
The cooled torch will be really helpful in AC welding, too, even at relatively low current and/or duty cycle the torch will heat up much quicker in AC. It's worth the money.
@richharr Жыл бұрын
I second this! Definitely the best money spent in my shop was a water cooler. Not to mention using a smaller torch for the same amperage.
@helplmchoking Жыл бұрын
Yep you think it's a fancy luxury right up until you get one and realize just how much better it is
@dennisyoung4631 Жыл бұрын
True. I’ve yet try aluminum with mine, but this tells me I *need* to get one. 100 amps DC in a gas-cooled torch is uncomfortable enough…
@embersaffron5522 Жыл бұрын
Aluminum also reflects/releases a lot more UV and thermal radation leading to you and your torch heating up faster as well
@Evilslayer733 ай бұрын
Indeed
@Turco9492 ай бұрын
Thank you for including Bill in your video, it was great seeing him after quite a few years! He has been my mentor and friend since 2010. He is a master mechanic, great fabricator/teacher and a great guy all around! He still has my Miller welding helmet I left at his shop which probably ended up being used by everyone like a bicycle in a small Italian village.
@DerDermin8tor Жыл бұрын
Started welding last year and it is like programming. Only very few get perfect on it, for the most of us it is about becoming less worse.
@75blackviking Жыл бұрын
Amen.
@MrJuxton99 Жыл бұрын
I've never seen a perfect welder. Been in the industry near on 30 years.
@75blackviking Жыл бұрын
@@MrJuxton99 Yeah, one of my fabricators was in aerospace welding and fab for 45+ years, and despite being the best welder I've ever seen by a long shot on all kinds of bizarro alloys, his weld quality had good days and bad days.
@et3213 Жыл бұрын
Is called a robot?
@BrooksMoses11 ай бұрын
I welded with a robot once, in my undergrad days. You haven't seen awful welds until you've seen what a robot can do when it's set up wrong!
@charliepearce8767 Жыл бұрын
I'm 63 and started my welding career around 15 16 years of age and welding something every week. You never learn how to welding and put the electrode, torch etc down and stop learning. You learn something new every day , every time you pick up the tool.
@jimrobcoyle Жыл бұрын
Use a variable speed 1/4 " drill to hold the electrode when you sharpen one.
@scottcarr3264 Жыл бұрын
I have been Tig welding for over 25 Years and have always hand held the Electrodes when grinding.
@vech400 Жыл бұрын
@@scottcarr3264I’ve got 25-30yrs welding experience too. You should try using the drill. Awesome idea, perfectly sharpened tips, no more burnt finger tips. I hand grind when I have to but usually keep a tin of 10-20 sharpened tungsten’s ready and re-sharpen any I’ve damaged at start of shift or after lunch before going back onto the job.
@Gessen27 Жыл бұрын
Hey man. I'm a (European) career welder. Mostly stainless and aluminium. I see American welders prefer using foot petals, but you can also get torches with inbuilt buttons. Most welders I've used don't use a foot pedal, but rather a button. A lot of them have pulse settings, which are nice. Most buttoned torches don't have the throttling capabilities, but you can instead adjust the up ramp and down ramp on the welder, along with the pre- and postflow. A note about grinding the tungsten electrode: Obviously, the dust is terrible for you to breathe in. So the specialized sharpeners are also a safety thing (so long as they're closed). If you don't care about the lung cancer risk, a quick, repeatable, and effective way to sharpen them is to put the tungsten in a hand-drill and grind it length-wise. The scratches should be going up towards the tip, or else the arc will likely wander. You noted the distance and angle you should keep the tungsten from the weld while welding, and then proceeded to hover the torch above the supposed weld. It is commonplace to lean the cup on the weld, regardless of whether you're walking the cup or not, as it's pretty helpful for keeping your hand steady and also for conserving arm/hand stamina. That said, free-handing nice welds is a sign of an experienced welder, so probably good to get some practice in that. You mentioned watercoolers. You should absolutely invest in one if you're going to be welding a decent amount of aluminium, as AC welding tends to get very hot. You don't NEED to dip the filler, you can keep it shoved in the weld and push for more weld, or ease off for less. Both techniques can result in very nice looking welds. This does NOT apply to aluminium, you should always be dipping with that. It's good to be able to get consistent welds in all sorts of positions (the various G- and F-positions), but holding the torch upside down, in your offhand, learning to weld in acute corners, changing filler holds etc. is also good practice. As you said, fit up is very important, but if you do have a screw up, make sure to tack it well before welding it fully. Helps with the warping. Also, on warping, if you have a long weld, its probably going to warp a bit. Especially with thin plates of stainless or aluminium. You can compensate for it sometimes by leaving the angle a few degrees obtuse if you're welding an inner corner and vice versa, but a good technique for long welds is tacking every 8cm or about 3 inches, and welding every other space first, and then weld the spaces in-between. Properly preparing the base metal is very important if you want to make pure and sanitary welds. It's also the easiest place to get lazy, as you said. One of the first things that I learned when I started TIG welding is that everyone does it a little different. So long as the X-rays show no impurities and you keep minimal undercut, its a good weld, regardless of appearance. Although, if you hit those marks, it usually looks pretty good too :P
@Hansengineering Жыл бұрын
Re: grinding your tungsten electrode. A good college friend and roommate is a proper Welding Engineer at SpaceX working on starship. During the pandemic i worked there as an integrator. We didn't cross paths too much, but would text and such. At one point I mentioned welders using angle grinders with no guard or handle to sharpen their tungsten and he was... heated. Apparently SpaceX DOES buy those expensive sharpeners and if you use a grinding wheel on something *going to space* it will apparently matter.
@NBSV1 Жыл бұрын
The biggest thing is the grinding wheel can get different bits of metal embedded in it that can then embed into the tungsten and contaminate the weld. Ideally you either have a grinder just for the electrodes, or the special tool.
@vinceabbott5438 Жыл бұрын
For something as sensitive and expensive as space equipment, I'd say that's a warranted response. For most anything less snooty and precise, fancy tungsten sharpeners aren't generally needed.
@vech400 Жыл бұрын
I’ve welded everything from carbon steels, 1 1/4 Crome to 9 Crome, to different stainless steel’s to Inconel to nickel and copper nickel, aluminum and copper alloys. I’ve had welds gone through “non destructive testing” with X ray, Ultrasonic, Phased Array and never had a weld fail due to using a grinder to sharpen my tungsten. But I guess if you’re spending billions of dollars to go into outer space you can afford a 2-3-$400 tungsten sharpener. The main thing is grind your tungsten the right way. Don’t have you tungsten at 90 degrees to the wheel spinning it. Hold it straight on to the wheel so the grind marks run along the length of the tungsten. The arc will be a lot more stable. Having a perfectly sharpened tip does help control the arc in tight awkward spots where you only get 1 chance at getting it right. In critical welds the angle ground on your tungsten, heat input (amps vs travel speed), inter pass temperatures, proper gas coverage are more important.
@mytuberforyou Жыл бұрын
yeah, radioactive tungsten contamination everywhewre and then having to pay out millions when an employee gets cancer is probably a lot more expensive than a sharpener.
@Hansengineering Жыл бұрын
@@mytuberforyou lol it's openly wondered at how no one has died at "Starbase" yet.
@videogalore Жыл бұрын
Your honest failures are more helpful to society than you might know - whether they are something you have made and since regret or something you have bought/adapted and wish you had done it differently.
@RussellBeattie Жыл бұрын
The amount and variety of stuff you have "laying around" is always impressive.
@MMMMIIIITTTT Жыл бұрын
"A good pilot is always learning" -I'm proud to see another Matt making the world a better place. So much good info here. I've only ever done arc welding so far, but this makes me more excited about trying these fancier welding methods and materials.
@nicks3037 Жыл бұрын
Appreciating all the great Matt's over here
@sykoteddyАй бұрын
I bought a combo machine a couple of years ago with an Arc welder, a plasma cutter and a TIG all in one. Since then I've wanted to try TIG out, it's actually been what I've always wanted to learn of all welding types.
@motjuste8549 Жыл бұрын
My buddy, Walrus (you my know him if you're into Chrysler Hemis) had me TIG welding in 10 minutes. There's nothing like having a good instructor. (I had never welded anything in my life before that and have since forgotten everything he told me because I don't weld, but it was fun to do it.) Excellent video.
@Ron_EZ Жыл бұрын
I bought the Everlast Power MTS-211Si, I've had it for about 5 years, I wish it had AC (Something I forgot when I purchased it)
@NonEuclideanTacoCannon Жыл бұрын
"A bad tattoo that someone traded meth for" I'm always at a loss to describe that sort of art, that's a beautiful description.
@pingram01 Жыл бұрын
I have seen several weld vids and none of them talk about safety, but not the safety of electricity, the safety of eyes. I remember from trade school that looking at the welding arc is over 3x worse than looking directly at the sun. Even worse than glancing at an arc is looking directly at it because you have focused your lenses and are now literally burning your retina and it will _never_ heal. Always wear clear safety glasses. The plastic they are made from is around 99% UV filtering, which will save you from 1) welder's flash 2) black spots in your vision. One day I managed to accidentally arc 12" from my face. I was blinded instantly (for a couple of minutes), but I never got welder's flash and the damage to my eye was minimal because I was wearing safety glasses. Yeah, There is still a streak off to the right of my vision which looks like there's a fingerprint smudge on my lens, but it's preferable to a black streak of burned eye cells. That happened 20 years ago and it's still there today. LOOK AFTER YOUR EYES! And, if you're welding around other people, get them to wear safety glasses and call out "eyes" before you arc up. Keep up the good work!
@andrewjohnson442 Жыл бұрын
I've been learning welding at school for a couple years, but I learned some things in this video, thanks
@michaelszczys8316 Жыл бұрын
I welded for about 2 years just winging it. Then got a job in a shop where I could learn more seriously and got really good. I welded for almost 25 years before I got to use a TIG welder. Now I have been using one every work day for 20 years. But I never had any classes on welding
@mccarterjg Жыл бұрын
I still have that snap-on helmet somewhere, I picked it because that was the largest viewing screen on a helmet, and almost immediately I melted half of the decal off. I recently bought a Miller helmet from the gas supply store intown cost the same as the snap-on did, but definitely a lot better battery life and also a lot better functionality
@larslarsman Жыл бұрын
Going beyond a nice looking bead. You have to do destructive testing. Hint, a short replica of your intended metals, weld it, put it in a vise try to bend it at least 180 degrees. Ductility? Bend it back straight, then bend it 180 degrees again. The other problem I see with most utube welding vids, is no beveling of the metals, and/or proper gap spacing of the two pieces if they are thin.
@bastiat691 Жыл бұрын
Best of luck mastering welding, from one of the rare people on the internet who are supportive :)
@Gottenhimfella Жыл бұрын
As someone who shares most of your challenges, I would add just one thing: once you get the hang of the things (which you generally covered) which need to happen in the middle of the puddle, and at the front of the puddle (where you dip etc) it pays to put equal focus on what happens at each side edge of the puddle. First: is each side in the right place relative to the workpiece? Second: is the arc melting the parent metal sufficiently to allow for good tie-in of the molten metal to the parent metal? Third: is the puddle filling out with new metal to the right profile at that edge (followed by a glance at the centre, and then at the other edge). It's easiest to do these things with TIG, and hardest with stick. MIG is in between. Like stick, it happens too fast, but unlike stick, you can generally see it happening.
@patmurray7408 Жыл бұрын
Bill is great! He set me straight last year on Tig. Great video Matt. It was a good refresher for me haha.
@marcellemay7721 Жыл бұрын
I built my own water cooler for my water cooled tig torch using a 1 gal gas tank as a reservoir, an on demand diaphragm pump that I had laying around and a automatic transmission cooler as the heat exchanger. And the cooling fluid is a 50/50 mix of distilled water and antifreeze, because my garage is unheated, and the antifreeze provides a degree of corrosion protection in the cooling system. I like the water cooled torch because it stays cooler and I can hold the torch a little closer to the tip without getting burned. I'd been mig welding for 30 years before I tried tig. Tig is a different animal, so I watched everything on youtube about tig that I could and got more confused and in my head about tig welding. In this regard a teacher will give you the "on the fly" tutelage that can lessen the learning curve substantially. Then you can spend more time practicing and applying what you learned rather than trouble shooting your issues. But alas, I'm stubborn and continue to teach myself the wrong way of doing things. This video has a ton of useful info in it as to the importance of certain things and the unimportant parts. Being able to see the actual weld puddle is paramount. Clean lenses and blocking out the light from behind you was something I learned on my own and I fabricated a hood for my helmet to keep the light from behind me reflecting into the inside of my lenses, makin it very difficult to see. I also wear prescription glasses which tends to compound the problem. You want the inside of that helmet to be as dark as possible, with no exterior light coming in while your welding area should be well lit. It's a PITA to have to learn this stuff on your own. If I'd taken a class, I would have shortened my learning time and saved myself lots of frustration.
@xXRunDeathXx Жыл бұрын
im a federally approved welder in germany and i have no probelms with anything you said in this video. but id like to add two things: firstly: i cant stress enough how important the jacket and long sleeves are. they are not to protect you from heat but from the UV rays wich can cause severe burns after only a couple of minutes (seriously!!) secondly: timestamp 18:38 maybe not place your welding helmet glass side down if you want to prevent scratches?
@thzzzt Жыл бұрын
Nice TIG crash course! Only thing I would add, which I also learned kind of late, is to relax and breathe. If you use the "grip of death" on the torch, you're going to be too stiff to turn corners and make adjustments. If you hold your breath (like you would when shooting a rifle) your longer welds are going to suffer.
@unibeastbeats Жыл бұрын
"like any good welder, I blame the equipment" lol, thats the truest thing said in this video.
@johntaylor1947 Жыл бұрын
I have welded for 50 years and at my age seeing what I am welding is a issue. I have found that a bright work light helps a lot I use a led fludlight and it makes seeing exactly what I am doing easy.
@CrippleConcepts Жыл бұрын
You forgot the best weld method known to man, JBWeld.
@lungshenli8 ай бұрын
JustRolledIn taught me thet sprayfoam also totally works
@skeggjoldgunnr3167 Жыл бұрын
I once wowed a crew of welders by demonstrating that I can weld a broken heart, the crack of dawn, even. YEP! I done burned me some rod in my day mmm-hmmm. Food grade stainless, Aluminum bread racks, a 900 Ton ladle crane, Interstate bridges, pressure vessels, powerplant turbine addition pipe welding in the trenches, pipe work on the roofs of Winn Dixie's and super Walmarts for cooling towers, rebuilding slopped-out front-end loaders in the pit of a quarry, rebuilding cement mixers and rock crushers on-site in the elements...ships in Manitowoc through the night with cans of PBR keeping work going and the strong backs that moved the cape hatteras lighthouse! Then a grade school kid welded so pretty right before my eyes - I took up a different trade. That was my 9 year old daughter. She said she was usually wearing a helmet and watching my weld style over my shoulder and learned from that. Guys: find out if your daughter is a million times more skilled at it than anyone you've ever seen move a puddle.
@ahbushnell1 Жыл бұрын
Nice video. I'm taking welding at Palomar college. Great equipment and instructor and its cheap. I hired a guy at a maker space that got me started. For the same amount of money I'm taking a semester worth of welding. stick, mig, flux core tig, al tig, and metal cutting. Also love send cut send.
@viscache1 Жыл бұрын
My survival instructor in SF would often say “If your daddy told you that “Practice makes perfect”, HE LIED! ‘Only Perfect Practice Makes Perfect!’” This is never been more true than of welding. I have a 50Hp Lincoln/Honda stick welder, MIG Lincoln and TIG welder and a plasma cutter with a 5’ x 10’ plasma table on the way. I never took a class. But if my weld is imperfect I grind it out and do it again. After you do this a couple dozen times you start to pay attention to the details.
@coolboarder654 Жыл бұрын
Comfort is one of the first things should think about when starting to weld and I think it’s too often overlooked. You need to be as comfortable as possible when welding. That mean seated with head and arms in a comfortable position. Gloves on so you are not jumping when your hands get hit with molten metal. Proper helmet, cloths and shoes. Trying to weld squatted on the garage floor with arms fully extended while trying to avoid molten sparks will not result in the highest quality welds.
@ArriGaffer Жыл бұрын
I have an inherited Miller Syncrowave monster that I have been using since the 80's but decided to get a Primeweld 225 which I am pretty happy with. It came with a gas cooled torch and was pretty disappointing on the 1/8" aluminum thing I wanted to weld. So I got a liquid cooled torch and cooler. I did read the manual and was really angered to see the outlet voltage change. Sure I could hit the cooler power switch but the first time I forgot to turn the cooler on I would be double mad. So I took the Primeweld apart and rewired the receptacle to always be 120v. While I was in there I added resisters to the fans to slow them down to quiet (but still moving some air) and 100˚ thermo switches to the heat sinks so that if they do get warm the fans will come on full. Even at 100 plus amps the fans don't come on. Did the same to a couple coolers. I've done this to several machines in the last 40 years and wouldn't have it any other way. Why have annoying fan noise for no reason? Anyway the difference between the gas and liquid cooled torches was so dramatic it was amazing. I still strive to be less bad and learn more but I get things done and it's not all ugly. I'd love to see discussion of the results of varying the AC balance, frequency, torch angle, gas rate, and etc. I often seem to be welding some crap metal casting with dirt inclusions and find it tough to make pretty welds.. Thanks for the very useful video that is helping lot of folks cut through the plethora of info and get headed toward better practices!
@Akya2120 Жыл бұрын
Can you make a video about your GD&T considerations for send cut send? Stuff like alignment tab clearance and tolerances for existing parts. That would be great!
@nick_7869 Жыл бұрын
Hi Matt. Don't poke the filler into the pool. Let it melt in the plasma and it'll jump to the pool on its own. It'll always put the right amount in too. Your filler rod never needs to touch. Makes for a pretty weld as well.
@DrFiero Жыл бұрын
I bought one of the first Everlast welders (when they first hit the market) about 20 years ago, a 3-in-1 that does TIG, Plasma, Stick. It still works the same as the day I bought it!
@DrFiero Жыл бұрын
Oh, and my machine is straight DC - the AC/DC machine back then was (IIRC) 3 times the price. Times... they have changed though! Spend the extra dough up front, and get the AC/DC variety.
@ethanmiller5487 Жыл бұрын
When cat welding I find its most important to catnip the areas on both cats and then use a "scrich scrich" motion. If you hear a rumbling sound its working purrfectly.
@jacky445 Жыл бұрын
I have learned on a handheld portable stick welder since I was 11 years old in our garage, and it took me the while to get good at it especially with all that slag it created that was hiding the actual weld. When I later on bought my own MiG welder it become so much easier to weld with it because I could see the actual weld straight away.
@NBSV1 Жыл бұрын
Stick has one of the steepest learning curves. If you learn stick first then mig is easy as it’s basically just a hot glue gun for metal.
@evanbarnes9984 Жыл бұрын
Stick is weirdly fun! It's such an aggro process. Loud, dirty, and can be used absolutely anywhere. I never made what I would call good welds with stick, but it'll put damn near anything together it seems like.
@bradb4421 Жыл бұрын
@@NBSV1 Yea, the welding class I took at a CC years back, stick welding was taught for a bit over half the semester first, before anything else. Made everything else after so much easier to pick up.
@sp33d4l0l Жыл бұрын
@@evanbarnes9984 It sputters and smokes like crazy, but not many things are as satisfying as laying down a stick weld where the slag just pops off by itself.
@jaredlancaster4137 Жыл бұрын
@@NBSV1 Gotta say, I've never understood this. I didn't think stick was *that* hard to learn and I'm totally better at stick than anything else.
@jake9705 Жыл бұрын
10:28 -- Matt, they make little thingys about the size of a Bic lighter that hold the filler rod for you. On top of it is a system of wheels (gears?), one of which you rotate with your thumb. Rotating that wheel/gear will move the filler rod forward or back. Supposedly this is easier than sliding the filler rod down your glove with your thumb. Check it out! I'm not a welder but I remember a welder friend telling me about this tool.
@LynxSnowCat9 ай бұрын
I was going to say this. (Most current 'TIG pen holders'?) Pinch the rod under a finger-driven wheel at its tip while the wire/rod entered the other end of a stick. -I forget which company included it as a 'freebie' with purchases $$ or larger, but eventually people stopped picking it as the reward.- I found the "here, have this _[plastic]_ TIG pen" people kept giving to me in college -years after I shut up about getting mine back- more tiring to use than the one I made in high-school. It must be fairly intuitive for most people, since only ( US PAT D952011 ) is the only commercial variation that doesn't emulate a pencil I could find (today) on Google. My high-school shop 'let' me make one out of flat-stock that bends/curves the rod between three rollers. The weight of the handle rested easily in my palm while guiding the filler with my finger tip, and extending/retracting it with lazy swipes of my thumb. I couldn't manage to set an arc in thicker wire/rod with the dispenser itself, but the offset rollers meant that I had no trouble keeping any arc landing exactly where I wanted it while keeping my knuckles resting on the work surface. (note: am cataleptic / have paralysis ) But.... I did find a 2017 thread on weldingweb forums about a few shop-made from a bit of bent tubing or coiled wire that's the same shape/profile as the one I made was. Only without the extra complexity of hanging bits of an old tape deck on a cam to constrain an arc in the wire/rod. I might have to make one of those if I do try welding again. Would certainly be less work tailor to the shape to my hand than alternating bandsaw+files (on pieces fished from the scrap bin) was.
@W0DAN889 ай бұрын
Takes the fun out of TIG
@MatterMage Жыл бұрын
Great Video! The only two things I would have included cause they are cool are 1. Aluminum rusts a hard outer-shell instead of flaky grossness of steel. This shell melts at a significantly higher temperature and is the main reason for a a good pre grind/clean on aluminum. Some welders can modulate the signal to blast away the outer-shell with one portion of the square wave and to weld (input heat) with the other. My welder has a Cleaning/Penetration knob for deeper welds or better shell blasting. 2. Heat spreads in aluminum much faster than in steel. For this reason you need way more juice for the same thickness of material being welded. For the same reason as you approach the edge of the material (especially points and corners) you "push" the heat ahead of the work area and this concentrates as you approach an edge and it all melts away. Thus you need to ease off the throttle before you get there. Great Video! Oh and I guess 3... Aluminum expands/contracts MUCH more than steel and minor warping problems in steel will triple for the same project in aluminum.
@matthewpeterson3329 Жыл бұрын
I bought the Prime weld 225 about 4 years ago, on a lark, hoping to teach myself to Tig. After Mig welding with my Miller 185 for 25 years, I figured it was time to try, and how hard could it be, right? Tig welding is an artwork. Any asshole can Mig... Tig takes some skill, which I still don't possess, but the Prime weld really makes it much easier. And their customer service is awesome!
@alaricpaley6865 Жыл бұрын
A weird tip I picked up from my time TIG Welding: When you have a chunk of steel that's giving you hell because of contamination, hit it with Silver Rustoleum spray paint and then weld it. Something that offgasses from that seems to help. Never did figure out why it worked.
@GreeceUranusPutin Жыл бұрын
I'm NOT doing that, thanks anyway.
@kapytanhook Жыл бұрын
Oxygen is afraid of all the cancer vapors it creates :D
@towhee7472 Жыл бұрын
Stop giving dangerous advice, this way you will poison yourself!
@alaricpaley6865 Жыл бұрын
@@kapytanhook i mean. You should have a breather pack and keep your face out of fumes anyways. Vaporized metal is also pretty bad for you. I worked with Stainless more then 50% of the time, the chromium in that is more likely to give me cancer then the spray paint.
@kapytanhook Жыл бұрын
@@alaricpaley6865 fair point, zinc makes me pretty creeped out. I got a simple diy suction hose. But it's not enough to be honest. I have gotten bad headaches and such
@lawrence17201 Жыл бұрын
i am a retired welder and watched and i have to admit you narrated perfectly. i am impressed you did great. LOL let the people also know that practice makes perfect. then have someone grade your weld. and that applies on all different types of metal and thickness.
@hooptiej Жыл бұрын
I love this. pretty much describes all my mechanical tool knowledge - Start Doing (it wrong) .. either you learn the right way eventually or give up cause you're so horrible until someone shows you what you've been doing wrong all these years. my dad put a soldering iron in my hand as a child and ive been soldering ever since ... 30 years later i watched a louis rossman soldering video and learned... and immediately went and threw away half my tools and replaced them with cheaper better versions of the tools, and far more expensive and reliable consumables. overnight i went from a .. passable thru-hole electronics guy, to an adept surface mount capable solder-monkey.
@camillosteuss Жыл бұрын
I learned tig by watching machinist content online for over a decade... Got a machine, started welding and in a short time i moved to 30amps hotter than 1amp/1thou, as i tend to move quite quickly. The filler can be shot out of the hand while you are moving it in, if you dont like shuffling it slowly and dont need to stop the welding due to decent coordination... You just twitch the wrist forward, release the filler half swing and let it launch itself forward around 4 inches and then you quickly grip it down and continue feeding the weld... Shuffling it allows for more consistent works, but initially, you can get the tossing of the filler forward to be done in less than a second, allowing you to delay learning to shuffle the rod forward if that is a variable you dont want to contend with at the moment... I also tend to have a free rod of filler laid in the area where i will be welding, held by the far end, which gives me automatic filler constantly, especially for angled joints, or thin sheet butt-welds... The other hand provides additional filler as per demand... It does not mitigate the need for a filler rod in the other hand nor does it negate the need for regular use of filler, but it does provide a very nice amount of bonus material that allows some situations to behave much nicer than they would otherwise... Its also a decent move when doing root passes in thick plate work... Just lay down say 3x1mm filler rod down in the V bevel joint, start the weld and let the whole thing flow together and mix in with base metal... A hot pass after that consolidates it with the surrounding area even better, and modulated cooling with a torch does wonders to normalize the metal and prevent any brittleness due to heat from happening... Just as a preheat is and can be beneficial to both thin and thick metal work... Tig is beautiful and everyone should find a way to enjoy it, as its truly a meditative activity when you get your shit together... Also, i use a solid glass visor... Autodarkening helmet screen was ripped out and replaced by 1 clear welding sheet of glass, 2 shade 13 sheets of glass and another sheet of clear welding glass to back it all up... So its 4 layers of shielding glass which with double shade 13 renders the helm absolutely black... I set my hands up, additional filler and everything, find the most pleasant position and headbang the visor down as i press the tig button... Yeah, no pedal, no autodark... Old school only, and i always unscrew either of the light bulbs in the welding room, depending were im facing, so i dont have glare from behind... You dont need insanely expensive helmets and a light studio to weld... Regular old school glass will do you perfectly safety wise, even better than many cheap screens, and the arc once struck will provide you with all the light you need to see while welding... No lamp will add anything to the brightness of the struck arc, apart from aiding those with autodark helms to better see through the screen when its transparent... And my favorite tungsten is grey... Some call it cast iron tungsten, but i weld steel with it and like it the best... Alu and such nonsense doesnt enter my shop... Its steel, toolsteel or inox for welding... All the best, and i hope any of this helps someone...
@rnk482 Жыл бұрын
I have been a welder for 18 years and everything you said is spot-on. It's something you have to learn by doing. Any good welder has gone through the same frustrations you went through.
@bulletproofpepper2 Жыл бұрын
Thanks, as a self taught welder, I know exactly what your saying. Not knowing is handicap and as a result just adding more weld and grinding off the excess isn’t productive. I think I need to find myself a “Bill”. Thanks for sharing. P.S great humor and info.
@owensparks5013 Жыл бұрын
Looking forward to Matt rigging up a laser scanner and a robot arm to keep the welds at a consistent distance, speed and angle...
@t3ck3r Жыл бұрын
😂 I could see Matt doing that 🤣
@xaxis1200 Жыл бұрын
hands down the BEST welding video for beginners on the internet! i hereby award the video "KZbin legend " cheers!
@willjones2954 Жыл бұрын
We should all do refresher courses every now again just to keep this on toes
@petergamache5368 Жыл бұрын
Tip: Do not weld on your toes. Superglue works better for bonding flesh.
@willjones2954 Жыл бұрын
@@petergamache5368having you ever welded your mates steel cap boots to the bench
@questioner1596 Жыл бұрын
I think we need refresher courses on driving too - our insurance rates would probably lower by more than the cost of the course by removing bad habits from our roads.
@willjones2954 Жыл бұрын
@@petergamache5368 I do like that 🤣🤣😂
@CenPapi Жыл бұрын
@@questioner1596 doubtful, insurance companies would just pocket the extra savings rather than passing it down.
@michaelkrenzer3296 Жыл бұрын
I have been hugely impressed with my Primeweld MIG180. If you every need it, their customer service department is the owner and the QA/testing engineer...in the US, answering the phone almost 7 days a week about 14 hours a day.
@Nairod2 Жыл бұрын
I been welding for about 6 months, I realized that the most important thing is running on the hot side without melting holes in your work.
@Jonathan_Doe_ Жыл бұрын
On the flat maybe.. Not so much when you’re doing uphill or overhead butt welds with root gaps.
@Nairod2 Жыл бұрын
@@Jonathan_Doe_ my first welds were awful because I was too afraid of melting things, until I realized welding is about melting 2 pieces of metal together. I think most people start shy, and the beads are awful because they lay in the surface and don't penetrate far enough. Or at least that was my issue
@KenzertYT Жыл бұрын
10:04, when tattooing especially doing linework, using your arm/body to slide along a set path and using your fingers for the fine adjustment is usually how you get clean lines (like welding.) In tattooing, you obviously don't want to sit on one spot too long, or too short. Your arm/body movement is what determines the "rate / pace" of how much over how far. The thing is if you are doing welds that do not fall on straight lines, save the fingers for the "fine adjustments" (shapes curves zigzags, etc...) and use your arm/body to pace the weld. Just like tattooing! But, literally, whatever works for someone, works for someone.
@bman20000 Жыл бұрын
Enjoy the videos. Don’t think it will take you long to appreciate the water cooled torch…even if you don’t go much over 120 amps. That said you mentioned the aluminum rod melting if you get the rod too close, which it can do. However what I tend to find is that it melts usually as you are trying to dip, if that happens it’s because the torch angle and the rod angle match if that makes sense. Think of the torch as a laser and the metal as a mirror, that’s how the heat acts in a sense. So if you get in the reflected heat you’ll make the rod turn into that balled up garbage. Only happens with aluminum, but feeding from a different angle will fix it. Not that you need my help I’m sure there’s 900 comments of useless info already haha.
@johannjohann6523 Жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed the video. You cannot emphasize enough the need for a quality helmet to 1) Protect your eyes, and 2) To be able to see what you are welding clearly to get a good weld. You can get helmets that use an outer disposable lens, because occasionally it will get pitted and damaged over time, and you just trade the old one out. So don't cheap out on the helmet. Your eyes are worth it.
@edwardfletcher7790 Жыл бұрын
You've been doing incredible work given you're self taught, but I really hope you get a lot more satisfaction out of your welding now you've got a broader skill set👍 A good looking weld is usually a structurally superior weld. Stop/start is a VERY limiting method 😕
@rmacoris Жыл бұрын
As a self taught welder, who doesn't really know what is doing to this day, I find comfort in the fact that it's not only me that feels lost when welding stuff 😂😂😂. One tip I got from my KZbin Course is that, if the puddle takes a minute to form, it's too cold, if it almost immediately explodes, it's too hot (so simple yet so true) 😂 And as always, loved the video. 👏
@Metalcrafter Жыл бұрын
Your welds have improved immensely after taking the course. Ditch the pin vise and buy a cheap cordless drill and use it to spin your tungsten when you're grinding the point. The A arm looks awesome!
@Robert-d9w2n9 ай бұрын
How refreshing to have an "internet guru" deliver useful information in such a fun, humorous way! Your tips are great, and your delivery style makes me want to stick around for more. Well done!
@BetoElViejo Жыл бұрын
I took a welding course at a local Vo-Tech in 74 and welded for about 43 years. Your video piqued my interest as to how the training has changed over the years. You are learning good habits which will serve you well in the present and future. Multi-pass purged thick-wall steel or aluminum tubing is something backyard novices will probably never address, but it's a hoot to use a scope to see a beautiful bead on the inside of the tubing. If you ever have your welds tested by X-ray you'll soon appreciate welding as an art form and not merely a trade or a craft. BTW, plasma arc and laser welding was pretty much in its infancy in 74 but they're commonplace in some industries today. So, thanks for the video and happy welding as you continue to learn and develop your skills.
@johnvonmartin7501 Жыл бұрын
True the bending and joint of each metals as a whole structure is quite fascinating to dissect. Mixing metals is another skill in welding which is metallurgy which I'm willing to learn since it's pathway to casting or sculpting a statue.
@stevewilliams2498 Жыл бұрын
I am 70 and earned a living welding (MIG mostly) a lot of my life. I watched this because I enjoy your channel and I aspire to your mantra "always be learning"
@ekim000 Жыл бұрын
Loving your work Matt! Being genuinely entertaining while getting useful information into people's heads isn't a commonly encountered combo.
@Ma_X64 Жыл бұрын
LaYZr means Lanthanum, Yttrium, Zirconium. These electrodes were originally developed for automated inert gas welding.Therefore, since visual control does not play a role in such a process, it was necessary to create an electrode that would retain its shape for a long time after sharpening.
@gonzotronn Жыл бұрын
I taught myself to TIG weld aluminum via YT and it's hilarious to watch you make the exact same mistakes I did. Dipping your tungsten and having to stop and grind it each time is a very humbling experience. Oddly, I can't wait to do more. Great video! You earned a new subscriber.
@jhuntosgarage Жыл бұрын
"Ego is not your friend". I learned this years ago from Dr. Gas, the inventor of the x-pipe exhaust system and many other suspension upgrades for vintage cars. He's now independently wealthy and still no ego.ove your channel. Tha ks for sharing.
@messinger123 Жыл бұрын
Enjoy all your videos but this has been by far the most useful for me personally. You identified all the worst TIG mistakes I currently make. I suck less now! Thanks.
@metamorphiczeolite Жыл бұрын
A Superfast Matt and a This Old Tony video on the same weekend! Life is good.
@dmacpher Жыл бұрын
This Old Tony enters the chat
@christopherbrown6697 Жыл бұрын
I've been half-ass MIG welding occasionally for 25 years. I took a TIG class at our local Makerspace right before the pandemic shutdown, so had minimal time to practice. I'm looking forward to getting back into it. Recently, I had some trailing arm mods that needed to be done ASAP. I was lucky enough to find a local one man shop that mostly does aerospace and marine contract work, but the owner likes a little variety in his week, so he'll do little side jobs to break up the monotony of doing 200 identical submarine parts. I highly recommend building a relationship with an older, experienced welder as a backup plan for emergencies and a good source for pointers.
@yutub561 Жыл бұрын
I have the alphatig 201xd. Love that machine. Super affordable and came with everything I needed to get started except for the gas and tungsten/filler. Works really well
@majornerd2 ай бұрын
I love your channel. Content, tone, voice, pace, wackiness of the projects, and your humility. Just fantastic.
@123456bpb Жыл бұрын
Thanks Matt for improving your welding skills. Your new grasp of basic welding skills will as well significantly help thousands of new technicians. Your excellent projects will now not expose viewers to unfortunate welding errors. Regarding grinding Tungsten; As a toxic heavy metal, all grinding dust should be captured and a personal respirator used. The same caution applies to grinding Tungsten Carbide tools as well. Matt, your humor is priceless. You are very funny. Your potential to influence budding Hot Rodders is significant. Keep up the good work. Our society needs your specific influence.
@manin10 Жыл бұрын
I did exactly what you did. After years of welding I took a course. What I learned on the course made my welds a lot nicer and I could do jobs a lot quicker but it didn't make my welds any stronger. I know thes because I made about 10 sample welds befor the course amd after a couple of months putting my new knowlwdge into practice I made 10 more. My old welds required a fair amount of cleaning up. My new welds didn't. But there was no difference in structural strength! That surprised me!
@felixokeefe Жыл бұрын
Very clear and concise explanation. Excellent!
@antoinepageau8336 Жыл бұрын
I'm in your old boat and still winging it. This video makes me appreciate the skill career welders develop. Actually my crappy welds make me appreciate the talent of skilled welders too.
@headwerkn Жыл бұрын
Love for the algorithm. Good to see you putting in the time to master the craft and can already see the improvement in those control arms. I did a speciality metal fabrication apprenticeship a few years back (before going back to engineering), mostly TIGing stainless for food and wine processing equipment. Was lucky to learn under some very skilled guys and eventually got Cert 7 qualified for high pressure stainless pipe work. It’s a rabbit hole for sure, but messing around with pulse settings can wield wonders for dialling in a consistent weld, getting the penetration without heat soaking the part.
@danlearned6199 Жыл бұрын
A little side welding story some may enjoy... Most all have seen photos of the strange 'Side Hack' or 'Side Car' Smokey Yunick brought to Indianapolis in 1964 that he called the 'Capsule Car' that included a drivers compartment separate outside from the main chassis/body. The first weekend thru tech inspection, the car was considered unsafe by the tech inspectors. They would not buy off any of his welding. The old school inspectors were familiar with the welds they'd seen for years on the old roadster style Kurtis Kraft and Watson Indy cars, put together with either oxy-acetylene or stick welding. Much larger, fatter welds often on DOM tubing rather than the chrome moly that Yunick used for his design. With Yunicks military aviation background he was familar with the advantages of strength and stiffness of CrMo tubing vs the mild steel DOM many used and appreciated the TIG welding used in the aircraft industry. He could use smaller diameter tubing that matched/surpassed the larger OD tube most the others had used for decades. The reason why the inspectors would not approve of Yunicks car is they were not familiar with or had ever seen the smaller, cleaner, tidy welds that TIG welding can produce. It wasn't until a certified aircraft inspector showed up that worked as a weld quality control inspector at North American Rockwell as one of the additional tech inspectors. He declared these welds were not only sufficient but some of the best TIG welds he'd ever seen. The irony of this is Smokey not only taught himself how to TIG weld but he built his own welding machine from scratch using recycled transformers, capacitors, switch gear and rehostats sourced as scrap from the phone and electric companies!!! The only 'store bought' TIG component was the air cooled TIG torch, the rest was all DIY!!! Learned this from his column in Circle Track Racing magazine when he was the technical contributor years ago,
@Ian-of9oi Жыл бұрын
Tig welding is like juggling and playing the harmonica at the same time while reading a book.
@WorkshopGreg Жыл бұрын
You took a class in welding. I'm impressed. You're already way ahead of most KZbin welders.
@999benhonda Жыл бұрын
I think I'll stick with my flux core mig. Might not look pretty, but easy to use.
@stevewilliams2498 Жыл бұрын
Another lesson I learned when I first picked up a TIG was you need to be able to see what you are doing. Your point about lenses holds true but I found I needed close focus glasses and varietals weren't working because you can't look through the bottom of the lens and through the mask lens at the same time. I only found out when I asked a mate to show me what I was doing wrong. As I stepped back to watch.. "all became clear" ( you can use that Matt if you want 😎🤣) because I was able to focus properly. Hope this helps others who, unlike you youthful presenter Matt, have aged eyes.
@morgananderson9647 Жыл бұрын
This was a great video! I learned how to "Stick" (Arc) Weld when in Jr. High. We also did aluminum sand casting... Sadly, the public school districts no longer provide these type of shop classes. :-( Would you consider, (I think it would be really fun) to attempt casting some parts for a car as part of your second video in this series? Thanks for all the great videos! (yes, I hit the "Like" button...)
@Chris-ut6eq Жыл бұрын
Yes, I had the same class in school during the last millennium. We goofed around a lot in that class just trying useful/useless things. I loved shop classes, wood, metal and auto. Sad kids don't get hands on experience like this anymore. These classes are helpful for the rest of your life.
@floorpizza8074 Жыл бұрын
We must be around the same age. The metal shop I took in Junior High did spot welding, metal bending, basic fabricating and metal casting. Then in High School it was welding, first with stick, then with MIG. TIG was its own separate class that you took after basic welding. Unfortunately, I never did take the TIG class, but damn, did I enjoy all the shop classes I took in Junior High and High School. In addition to welding, I took wood shop and auto shop. I ended up being an airline pilot (going to retire in a few more years), but of all the things I learned in the public education system, my shop classes were the ones that have really carried me through life. Such a shame that kids don't have the opportunity to learn these basic life skills anymore. Nowadays, they're too busy teaching the importance of correct pro-nouns and snow flakery to ever be concerned with skills that people actually *need* on a day to day basis.
@charlesfriend9557 Жыл бұрын
So sad that we live in a disposable world!
@mxpants4884 Жыл бұрын
@@floorpizza8074 Basic question... where is your sample of what today's kids are learning in school coming from? Social media outrage? How much time do you think kids are spending in mandatory gender studies classes that you think that's why shop classes have disappeared? I grew up between your generation and this one, and was around for the beginning of the pressure that put programs like shop classes out of even the best funded public schools. The reason kids these days don't have time for shop class is mostly due to the amount of time schools have to sink into teaching them to pass standardized tests. Welding would definitely be more useful.
@Zancb Жыл бұрын
I've been welding for ages and your simple explanation of TIG blew my mind. I just... never looked into why it was called TIG!
@freeidaho-videos Жыл бұрын
Nicely covered. I like that you covered the before and after the class. I started TIG by taking a night class at the local university. Best money I ever spent. The biggest issue for me is welding a few times a year like you say. So I just practice an hour on the exact metal thickness, settings, and joint. One can lay down several feet of weld in an hour. When I cut the practice short thinking "I got this," it is always the wrong decision. Specific practice helps the most. It is sort of like making 5 of something and the last one looking the best... of course. Here is a homemade TIG torch cooler that has worked for me. part 1: kzbin.info/www/bejne/q4u1YoR-eNCJp5o part 2: kzbin.info/www/bejne/rJipgphtqpWjodE
@sylvifisthaug Жыл бұрын
High point of the week or whenever is when you Matt, upload some shenanigans, where you ramble about car stuff and endlessly new projects. It calms my soul, please never stop!