My experience with MIG is that if you have 4 metal dining chairs to repair, you perfect your technique by the time you get the 4th one done and never have to weld that type and style of metal ever again. So the next time the MIG gets dug out, you're back to learning from scratch again!
@bman0412 жыл бұрын
You’re not wrong, but once you’re doing it everyday for 4 or 5 years, you get it first try. Then there’s aluminum mig, you get good at that right before you loose the work.
@mattym82 жыл бұрын
You should write a book! This is exactly right.
@mordokch2 жыл бұрын
Yup lol. Sounds about right to me.
@danriches73282 жыл бұрын
I started with TIG and I think I'll stick with it. I was thinking of getting a MIG but not after reading this comment lol!! Sounds like a pita and looks rough and like you say won't be any good until the last weld. Plus it's a CNC machine frame I'm building.
@Zanthorr2 жыл бұрын
@@danriches7328 TIG is king, but it wouldn't be a bad idea to be a well rounded welder and get either a mig or a stick welder. They're different animals
@RonCovell2 жыл бұрын
Tony - WOW, you're REALLY getting into the spirit of KZbin! Heavy Metal music, sparks flying, everything! You're going to gain a completely new audience! Seriously, you did an excellent job of covering pulsed MIG welding, a subject that few people have delved into. And you ALWAYS find ways to make it in-depth, and entertaining!
@Stuart_Cox19692 жыл бұрын
I know, cool
@jamesa75062 жыл бұрын
Still no match to that Ron Corvel...Covell...Cosomething guy. THAT guy is awesome!
@DanielConstantinoS2 жыл бұрын
Coming next: mig welder VS hydraulic press!
@RobsonWilliam822 жыл бұрын
Tony knows the difference between Metal and Hard Rock! 😂
@Vampier2 жыл бұрын
I was going to make a "he has spoken" joke ;)
@WarpFactor9992 жыл бұрын
Wow!!!! The ToT has graced us with a ~30 minute video!!! We are truly blessed on this day!!! (Thanks Tony)
@connorjohnson44022 жыл бұрын
Praise be!
@ThisOldTony2 жыл бұрын
Or as I sometimes call it... lazy editing. ;)
@jonmccormick68052 жыл бұрын
@@ThisOldTony But, it was good.
@brag00012 жыл бұрын
@@ThisOldTony there certainly were enough butts in this one 😂
@WarpFactor9992 жыл бұрын
@@jonmccormick6805 Very very good!
@StuffMadeHere2 жыл бұрын
Your flaming bandsaw is the funniest thing I've seen in a long time
@Lucas_sGarage Жыл бұрын
Hey what are you doing here? Go and make videos, jk. Love your channel man
@venture17fly Жыл бұрын
Flamesaw
@VacFink2 жыл бұрын
I can't wait for rest of my tools to get this smart. My hammer is in its 3rd year of community college and if I'm honest..the spend is largely wasted to building social skills. Sure its cooler at parties now, but on the job a palm sized rock with zero credits to its name is more than its equal.
@ianwhittinghill2 жыл бұрын
This comment is composed with the ideal tone, energy, and depth of Tony himself.
@videodistro2 жыл бұрын
This is so relevant and such a keen observation it's funny... and sad.
@ThisOldTony2 жыл бұрын
LOL & sad-LOL at the same time.
@alexmeakins2 жыл бұрын
I literally read that with Tony's voice in my head.
@me33332 жыл бұрын
Yeah but just think of how much better you will pound when your hammer gets it's liberal arts degree...
@JordanStAndre2 жыл бұрын
I love that I can watch this channel, without actually planning to ever do any of the making seen in these videos or applying the info you provide. As a non machinist or maker, I find myself extremely entertained by your videos
@ThisOldTony2 жыл бұрын
thanks JSA!
@tziirkq2 жыл бұрын
Tony is what inspired me to become a welder. Now I'm not only a welder, I'm also an UMEPLOYED welder, so things are looking pretty good.
@johnlivingston92172 жыл бұрын
nice pulsing!
@daanwilmer2 жыл бұрын
I start the same, then by the end of the video I'm looking up how much a MIG welder costs and then realizing I don't have a proper place to weld in, putting off my welding ambitions indefinitely (i.e. until the next TOT video).
@6jonline2 жыл бұрын
@@tziirkq Same. Between TOT and the old AvE, I ended up picking up a little Lincoln MIG welder. Totally useful in my IT job. OK, maybe when I get enough time to get out in the shop.
@jaycarva2 жыл бұрын
Would love to see another video but mostly just hoping that TOT and his loved ones are well.
@vanfather_candm2 жыл бұрын
Old Tony! I've been welding professionally for 20 years, pulse mig for at least 7 of those. You have grasped the science and nuance of a seasoned veteran. Even simplified the explanation of a couple questions I get asked occasionally. Welds look really good too! Strong work Buddy 💪
@samjtrost2 жыл бұрын
I had to pause the video after that intro to wipe the tears from my eyes. It was just so.... beautiful.
@60612 жыл бұрын
As an experiment, put it in manual mode and try .023" wire. I bet you can get every bit as clean of welds with the same minimal spatter.
@jvmiller19952 жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same.
@lunchboxproductions11832 жыл бұрын
I think the 1/8" thickness isn't a great example of the benefits of pulse MIG. It's more when you get into the 1/4"+ range that you start to see the benefits where you get the cleanliness of spray transfer with the position welding capability of something like an E71-T1 wire.
@ZILAwelds2 жыл бұрын
6061 That particular machine (at least from my experience) welds much nicer on the low end ( thin material ) with 030 compared to 023. Why ? I think it has to do with the 023 wire being really soft compared to the 030 wire being much stiffer and feeding smoother and more consistent …. That compared with the ST arc function ( or the part of that function that is very similar to millers RMD function) just works sooo much better and smoother with 030 than it ever has with 023 for me …. And dozens of autobody shops i did training …
@Golgi-Gyges2 жыл бұрын
@@lunchboxproductions1183 I remember using a pulsed MIG on thin stuff with good results. I surely did not know the best way to set it up, but it seemed to allow for more base metal cooling and I wasn't as concerned about burn-through.
@kevintimoshkin14702 жыл бұрын
Love your videos too bro!
@OwnTwoHands_2 жыл бұрын
A 30 minute ToT video just landed when I sent my wife and a kid to play outside. Awesome!:)
@dracolyth2 жыл бұрын
We miss and love you Tony!!!
@Spinningininfinity2 жыл бұрын
I'm glad Tony has still got a Pulse 😁
@DrinksInHighPlaces2 жыл бұрын
Every now-and-then it hits me: I haven't seen a TOT in a while. I'm sure it'll be any day now. Hope all is well!
@Touay.2 жыл бұрын
If Tony really wanted to impress us with his joining of this newfangled 'steel', he would use mortise and tennon joints.
@pappyweasel77662 жыл бұрын
I would watch that... Twice
@kempshott2 жыл бұрын
I live near Ironbridge (where the world's first metal bridge still stands) and that has cast iron dovetail joints.
@BadYossa2 жыл бұрын
@@kempshott That's an amazing piece of engineering. Knew a guy years ago with a metal workshop that was within spitting distance of the bridge.
@GuntherRommel2 жыл бұрын
@@kempshott I've driven through Ironbridge I don't even know how many times. I'm from the Saulter!
@markfryer98802 жыл бұрын
@@kempshott Cast iron dovetail joints, that's insane.
@leelotungal8192 жыл бұрын
Awesome Tony! I pulse Mig for a living and once you get it dialed in, it's practically spatter free, i use normal short work gloves when doing it. A tip i can give you is keep the nozzle further away from the work piece, use a pushing motion and set your voltage on the - Side for most joints, i usually run mine between -1.5 to -.05. Another cool thing if you're machine can do it, is to set your starting current about 10-20% higher, this will make starts alot smoother and spatter free. Take care baby!
@spiderchopproductions81722 жыл бұрын
The sparks off the surface grinder in the intro nearly did me in
@briansiler67372 жыл бұрын
I sure do miss the times when you posted your great and fun and witty videos more often.
@thokk102892 жыл бұрын
ToT, love your vids always puts me in a good mood when I see a release. I'm stoked you are back. I don't even do any of this stuff.
@malteser02122 жыл бұрын
alright then, I think, me being a professional metalworker, I should give you some advise: first of all, please leave the old ways of welding and with them the wire feed. One doesn't discuss welding power in wire feed, we use Amps. In the top left corner of your welder I see the Amps, it's at 104 at 6:35. With your tube cross section (I guess it's about 3mm or about an eighth") you could go up to 120 if you wanted to. Don't try messing with the arc correction too much, with pulse welding it is usually fine at +-0. Now to torch position and speed: You always want to push, never drag. Or in other words, your torch and the surface you're welding to will always make a acutely angled triangle(viewed from the side). The point of the triangle should always point in the direction you're welding. not much, maybe 80°-85° between the work and the torch. your distance from workpiece to mig tip should be chose in a way that you can still barely see the end of the wire before it is melting. not too close nor too far. speed is quite a tricky one, with pulse welding you don't have much of a variation window to produce nice looking and strong welds. You have to be quite quick. You mentioned you still heard spattering sounds, that's not neccessarily a bad thing, you should move a tiny bit faster than spattersoundslow. getting a spatternoise every few millimeters or so is ideal. not so fast that you don't hear any, not so slow that you don't hear nothing else. I hope you can see and distinguish your weld puddle. You want your puddle to be closed in front of the arc. The arc should touch the puddle, not the work. If your puddle is only very tightly closed before the arc that's perfect. If it is far in front: correct your speed, speed up. If your arc rides on the work and the puddle is barely keeping up: correct your speed, slow down. I hope this helps and is understandable, I am no native speaker. If you want further help I'll try and provide some if you ask. Have a nice weekend :)
@ZILAwelds2 жыл бұрын
👍
@ThisOldTony2 жыл бұрын
All excellent advice I'll try. Only problem: pushing a weld makes it difficult to film. :)
@malteser02122 жыл бұрын
@@ThisOldTony when welding you shouldn't worry about the video. You can film the weld afterwards, but first priority is that you see the weld well. You have to adjust your speed while seeing it. The video is, as hard as it must be to hear being a youtuber, not the priority while doing work.
@Nuno.A2 жыл бұрын
@@malteser0212 Pulling creates deeper penetration, pushing a more flat one, none is necesarly better then the other, just a case of choosing the best for the aplication, and for what he is doing pretty sure that's more then strongh enough, won't really matter
@60612 жыл бұрын
On thin steel, it's perfectly acceptable to drag a downhill weld. Never say "always"
@MHolt35732 жыл бұрын
THE MAN IS BACK.
@jeremycable512 жыл бұрын
My exact statement I came here to make lol
@tlange50912 жыл бұрын
@@jeremycable51 second
@Affected2072 жыл бұрын
HE’S BACK IN BLACK
@Leroys_Stuff2 жыл бұрын
Thankful
@mrjibrhanjamalkhan21442 жыл бұрын
Do you blow smoke
@bruced14292 жыл бұрын
I have the HTP Pro pulse 220 , I have mine it since last September. I works quite well especially on pulse. I use the 90/10 mix and mostly 0.30 wire but you can use 0.35 wire for pulse if you increase voltage 2-3 volts. HTP said that me when I asked as 0.30 wire is not always what you need. It works just fiddle with it . What I found was that you do need 1/2 Inch work to tip distance, if you change your contact to work distance you may have to change the voltage trim. I also got the #26 mig torch with 8 ft. whip and Teflon liner. You need this to weld aluminum plus the special tips. Buy a bunch of the 0.40 tips.Use a 1 inch tip to work length, sometimes even more .I found a shorter arc length the best, then no burn back, set your trim for no burn back. I have a 1.5 second taper down for ending the weld. Set the wire tension really light, like 1 or less. Start off with 5356 wire to learn the pulse then go to 4043 and try double pulse, MiG like tip they say. Good luck, hope to see a new video of you and this welder soon.
@jagboy692 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the tips Bruce... I'm still learning my 220MTS, but what I've done with it, I'm loving it!
@ZILAwelds2 жыл бұрын
Bruce, wow! Couldn’t have said it any better😂
@justion3372 жыл бұрын
Yeah even at the end I think he was still too close. Granted they're way more expensive, but the Lincoln pulse mig machines we use at work will crackle a bit at the start and end of a weld, but I've laid a 20 foot weld with no spatter, just the hum and the hint of a sizzle sound.
@BraaaptainAmerica2 жыл бұрын
Hard wire welding is awesome. There is regular short circuit welding, and spray arc welding. Short arc the wire actually comes in contact with the material, then heats up and leaves a blob of molten metal and typically uses 75% argon/25% carbon dioxide. The Co2 makes the arc hotter, and the argon focuses the arc. Spray Arc atomizes the wire before it reaches the puddle, and never comes in contact with the base material like Short Arc does. Spray arc needs 20% or less Co2 to initiate the spray. The higher the Argon, the more focused the spray, and the deeper the penetration. Ground location isn't too important with Short Arc, but with Spray the arc tends to pull toward the ground. Short Arc can be used in any position. Spray is only really viable in flat and horizontal position, Pulsed Spray can weld in all positions with the correct settings.
@user-wo7rz3yn4o2 жыл бұрын
Just 30 seconds into the video and I am once again jealous of this mans' talent. If he didn't seem so damn likeable and had such cool things to share and teach I would not waste any more time watching him.
@mastasolo2 жыл бұрын
I used to do production Mig welding in a factory, we always used tip dip (A gel like substance) to keep the tip clean of spatter, and to keep spatter away from the rest of your work piece, we used sacrificial pieces of thin steel to catch all of it, not perfect, but saved some hassle.
@cashgarman2 жыл бұрын
I was going to work today. But then I saw a 28min ToT video dropped and I put that silly notion aside. I hot-swapped into my ToT-Shirt merch, and got comfy. And as soon as you mentioned morning beer, I felt emboldened and reached for the shop mini-fridge. Thank you Tony, for being the Dad I Never Had.
@talltimberswoodshop75522 жыл бұрын
At about 15:00, the angling of the stick of plasma cutter is exactly the same principle of angled armor on a tank. Vertical sides are easier to penetrate than angled. The front glacis on a tank is very steeply angled and presents a much thicker material to the RPG, HEAT, or sabot round.
@russellclarke14242 жыл бұрын
Thank you, Tony. I had just the other day finished binge watching all your videos and my life felt so empty. Your return is very timely and has quite possibly saved me from doing some work.
@Donorcyclist2 жыл бұрын
It’s amazing to me how you can continue to create so much variety and keep such a consistent format! Love the entertainment and the education! Thank you, ToT.
@Jordan-90932 жыл бұрын
I use the same machine on aluminum everyday, it handles it absolutely amazing, with the 7ft 26 series whip and gun it’s awesome, no spool gun, just load the wire, change the setting and gas and start pushing, double pulse sounds a little funny, but puts out clean shiny puddles!
@ThisOldTony2 жыл бұрын
looking forward to trying it!
@jlcdrivewayramps7343 Жыл бұрын
As a seasoned aluminium welder, pls tell us how important is cleaning away the oxide cos I heard some pros don't clean. And it's not because they use AC Tig which can clean. I mean just pulse Mig. And what about preheating. Can you preheat with a electric heat gun ?
@Jordan-9093 Жыл бұрын
@@jlcdrivewayramps7343 I clean my base metal the same as if I was tig welding it, with a stainless brush, file and then acetone or alcohol. I have ran a few beads on some unprepared “dirty” aluminum and it did really well, other than the puddle not looking as good afterwords, yes you can pre-heat with an electric heat gun, although a rosebud works a lot better, I have generally only needed a pre-heat on over .250 thick material, and if you don’t have a way to pre-heat, just bevel and multi-pass it.
@jlcdrivewayramps7343 Жыл бұрын
@@Jordan-9093 thank you. Very clear answer.
@Mark-jn2hd2 жыл бұрын
Nothing makes me stop doing what I was doing quicker than a this old tony video
@benbatchelder89412 жыл бұрын
just graduated from welding welding school this morning and seeing this video pop-up was like a gift from god.
@rynbrd2 жыл бұрын
This was brilliant and timely as I'm also transitioning from TIG to MIG for some projects! I always learn something new here, thanks ToT!
@Sam-oh1ck2 жыл бұрын
Tony, I honestly find your content more entertaining than most of the stuff coming out of Hollywood.
@christophercastor66662 жыл бұрын
Magnetic grounding terminals are glorious for jumping around on work (when it’s not good stainless or named Al). Thank you as always, -CY Castor Love those grinder boogers and mid-forearm sunburn!
@indreklensment83742 жыл бұрын
I'm using pulse mig daily and I'd say that it makes less spatter than that Italian machine. Keep voltage regulated a bit to negative side and leave more cap between material and torch. On clean run there should be no spatter noise, only pulse sound. And double pulse - even more cleaner. Great video, thanks!
@msyoung76cj72 жыл бұрын
Yes there shouldn't be any crackling sound only the buzz of the pulse. If its crackling your trim is too low or your nozzle is too close to the puddle which tickles it and pisses it off lol!
@DrCranberry2 жыл бұрын
yep, it should buzz like spray transfer does at optimal settings, though it can also handle spatter. The puddle should look liquid like Spray but stray in place. thats why we use Pulse, simply because it gets the penetration of Spray, with being able to weld every position. It's very neat.
@Dymitr_Nawrocki2 жыл бұрын
Hi Tony, lately in pursue of greater precision i bought myself a new(old) bulgarian c11mb lathe and i would like to thank you Tony for draging me into this hobby, now i will look for some kind of small Fräsmaschine i watched Schaublin 13 video many times already but unfortunetly, swiss stuff is a bit expensive here, i will have to satisfy myself with something soviet probably. Anyway thank you for video, it makes a good day an even better day.
@keatoncampbell8202 жыл бұрын
You've reminded me of the terror I felt when I started as a factory welder. They handed me a welder, I asked for the settings and whatnot, they said 0.045 wire, 700in/m, 19V. I asked if I could change anything, and my supervisor said "I can turn the voltage up if you want" 😭😭 spray transfer makes a way bigger difference at 700 ipm, but it's just so much for 1/8 thickness
@jesseshort82 жыл бұрын
Luckily I had taken welding and millwright classes in high school so I knew what I needed to know to get it done but my first job as a welder was rebuilding locomotives. The lead man there was a dick and made sure to turn all the dials on every welder all the way to the left every night before we left. So every morning you had to set the machine up. And of course each welder ran different so until I figured out my preferred setting on each one and for whatever job I was doing that day it would ruin my morning messing with those rigs knowing that there was absolutely no reason to have to do that every day. Guy just hated his life I guess and wanted us to hate him. I forgot to mention none of the welder's digital displays worked so you were guessing to say the least.
@keatoncampbell8202 жыл бұрын
@@jesseshort8 that sounds like torture! I made doors in a ROC factory (think mega-dumpster!) and of course all they ever wanted was faster, so you had to glue these sheets together as fast as possible, and every turd burgling sociopath on first shift made 1/2 their target every day, with twice the people, and they'd set all the machines to 200-300IPM, sometimes only before they leave. We'd use them at 700-900IPM and set them back to 600 if we knew the guy on the other shift liked it like that. It just ground my gears that our shift made twice the cans they did with half the people, in the middle of the night, and they couldn't be bothered to do things like clean up the station or stock parts, and especially they loved to ruin our settings. What is it with people and messing with settings?!
@jimdarhower49452 жыл бұрын
That was solid advice from your supervisor 😂
@keatoncampbell8202 жыл бұрын
@@jimdarhower4945 True that! The difference in deposition rate at 900ipm between short arc and spray transfer is literally night and day. I mean short arc at 900ipm is basically a spatter spray!
@tinnocker542 жыл бұрын
What a great video! I have been welding over 30 years, This old dog learned some new good tips that will make me a better welder. Thanks Tony
@jacoolivier78252 жыл бұрын
You could make 10 videos a day and it still wouldn't be nearly enough. We love your work
@Broadpaw_Fox2 жыл бұрын
I'm at 6:40 and I just figured out what you're trying to do - I've only known this as pulsed SPRAY TRANSFER. Spray transfer is the type of mig welding where you lose the frying bacon sound of short circuit and get into the beautiful hiss of smooth spray transfer. It IS a very hot process though, so props on you for trying on tubing like that. But the pulsed version can weld outside of flat, and I'm sure could be used on tubing with some skill and practice. You need more voltage and wire speed though, as well as pure argon, no c25 for spray. Now to finish watching and see where this gets to. I have faith in you, Tony. 😀
@KiwiBassHead2 жыл бұрын
If you are having wire feed consistency issues try a Teflon liner. They are most often used with Ali' or Stainless wire but work really well for steel also. Only real downside is they don't last as long as the normal steel ones but that won't be an issue in a home shop. Also get yourself some Nozzle Dip and dip your torch once every 2-3 hours. Doing so will greatly reduce the spatter build up within the nozzle (especially the tapered type you are using) and I personally think it helps lubricate the contact tip a little also. Lastly I suspect your wire feed tension is a little low, try another half turn or so. The feed rollers will out last you regardless as they are normally hardened. The main thing to be wary of with feed tension is that there is not so much that the wire 'bids nests' in the feeder if it jams at the tip due to excessive burn back etc. One more quick trick that helps to keel dust and grit out of the feeder and liner is to thread the wire though a foam ear plug before it goes into the feed assemble, works like a 'way wiper' for your welding wire. Love your work. Cheers from NZ.
@garyplewa92772 жыл бұрын
Love your sense of humor! While not pulsed like your HTP, my 30yr old Lincoln SP-250 has full computer control and an LCD screen providing all of those options (e.g. Process, Wire, Gas, thickness) along with manual overrides. I find spatter to be more of a function of CO2 percentage. Straight CO2 spatters like crazy but also provides deep penetration. Straight Argon doesn't spatter much but also doesn't penetrate either. 80-20 Ar-CO2 mix is all I use for steel and if I don't want spatter to stick I spray the weld area with WD40 as a spatter guard. Yeah, now there is an oily film to clean, but a solvent wipe is easier then a chisel and grinder. Oh yeah, I almost forgot. The gun liner, especially if it is a polymer type, can wear out and cause the wire to stutter. My OE liner was teflon and after a while it made getting a smooth weld on thick steel impossible. I replaced it with a coiled metal liner and now my MIG acts like a hot-melt glue gun for steel.
@Nuno.A2 жыл бұрын
I don't want to expand much has I don't work with Mig/Mag in over a decade, the liner thing, teflon liners are for use with aluminium and if you are welding aluminium you must use it, aluminium sticks to the metal coil ones, like it happened to you if used with steel wire it get's destroyed easily
@garyplewa92772 жыл бұрын
@@Nuno.A I bought my SP 250 used and it was from a shop that did aluminum work. That explains why it had a Teflon liner then. Thanks, I never knew that.
@djamelhamdia1342 жыл бұрын
And I'm sitting here, still processing the "Turn a CUBE on a LATHE" on the last video!
@N1gel2 жыл бұрын
What a delight to listen to somebody that knows how to speak in ENGLISH and Stefan is a close 2nd.
@georghofmann17822 жыл бұрын
profesional german metalworker here .. i love the 3M Speedglas with Adflo (Respirator-sys) .. fresh filterd Air under the Helmet without a Mask .. but you have to be carefull with eating beans because the Air-intake is right at your Butt .. the 9100 FX Air Helmet is also great for grinding
@ThisOldTony2 жыл бұрын
😂
@kornaros962 жыл бұрын
Activated charcoal layer on the filters, and don't worry about that...
@zacharytuttle56182 жыл бұрын
Those hoods are amazing. Wish I could justify the purchase. My old employer had them.
@georghofmann17822 жыл бұрын
@@zacharytuttle5618 justify is easy .. very very easy .. its your health .. how much money is your health worth? .. and what's the cost to fix your lungs if its even posible?
@Ashley.00002 жыл бұрын
Tony Tony Tony.. you are the best medicine for when I feel down and out. You have a knack of getting your point accross that enthrawls everyone into you videos. Please keep up the good work and get well soon.
@RedDogForge2 жыл бұрын
coming up on three months since this video getting a lil worried, you ok Tony?
@inhale12 жыл бұрын
Adam Savage mentioned at a recent con that he loves your content. And so do I! Thanks for what you do ToT!
@inhale12 жыл бұрын
Also he mentioned that he would love to learn TIG. Collab perhaps??
@sungear2 жыл бұрын
Hey, ToT, i'm curious about your table. It's a part of the family by now, appearing in nearly every video. I wonder if you could show us your setup and how you use your bench. Perhaps in your next installment in august.
@garytodd5605 Жыл бұрын
Old Tony, i know were my mig pliers went now. They are laying on your bench. Then again they may be hiding out under all the junk laying on my welding table. One day, maybe one day i will get my table cleaned and recover my pliers. You havent lost your charm. Keep on bringing the content as only This old Tony can.
@soranuareane2 жыл бұрын
They do make anti-spatter sprays that are meant for HUGE stick weld jobs (talking half inch electrodes here) and they also work for the sane-person-sized MIG welds.
@inthefade2 жыл бұрын
I've seen some artist metal workers cover the piece in soot from a torch running with a bad oxygen mix. Michael Cthulhu, the giant sword maker, he does something like this.
@johncoops68972 жыл бұрын
@@snaplash - Fireball Tools did some tests and found some sprays that didn't need to be cleaned. However they didn't work very well as anti-splatter either. You have to clean your work before painting, so really it's no big deal.
@80564432322 жыл бұрын
Never, okay, not real often, have I sat glued to the screen while watching a video about something I care so little about. Well done!! That view out of the welder at your hands and camera, the music, the llamas mating? All amazing. I salute you good sir.
@marsrover0012 жыл бұрын
As a hazard freight gasless user we got 2 settings. High/low, and wire speed. Steel is so forgiving and a grinder covers all sins. Your fancy machine gives less splatter though, I'll give you that for sure.
@larsschaffert34652 жыл бұрын
Hey Tony long time fan here I'm 21 and from Germany, I just wanted to let you know that your videos are fantastic and I just wanted to thank you for helping me get my dream job and getting me through my apprecieship and beating all my exams in welding and machining. I now work for a company that builds filling machines for pharma industry😅. thanks for teaching all this precious knowledge ☺️.
@LittleAussieRockets2 жыл бұрын
Love the intro 🤣 for your peace of mind vertical down welds on thin gage steel are perfectly acceptable. It's only on the thicker stuff where you'll get into trouble. Thanks for another great video!
@geoffmooregm2 жыл бұрын
They are used on plenty of structural applications too. The welder and procedure both need to be qualified but it works well. Especially for an open root and cap. It is not un common to do a downhill open root with 6010, short circuit or RMD Mig and then fill uphill with FCAW, 7018, or Mig. Then do a downhill cap like the root. This way the root is easy to complete with no grapes, you fill with less passes and less cleaning between, then you can cap nice and flat.
@nationtheis50932 жыл бұрын
I love the tig torch chilling in the background of shots like a jealous ex
@RoofingConnecticut2 жыл бұрын
Hope you and the family are doing well Tony, glad to see you back
@ThisOldTony2 жыл бұрын
Thanks FirstName, right back atcha
@elirevzen4182 жыл бұрын
I'm about to do some mig welding for the first time in two years and this video pops up. Thanks for getting me thinking about this before I have the welder in hand
@AIAllar2 жыл бұрын
Just run the weld straight down and focus on getting the timing down. It might take a few tries but will leave a much stronger smooth weld. Jagged edges on a weld weaken the structure too because they give a sharper point to bend or break at.
@billl7551 Жыл бұрын
Well well. I have been welding stuff (unprofessionally) for 60 yrs and did not know MIG could be that clean!! Tony scores again!
@JaradRabbit2 жыл бұрын
6:56 *bangs nozzle on tube to dislodge junk* "Get all that junk out of there" 21:40 "Keep your nozzle clean, and don't bang it around to clean it."
@waitemc2 жыл бұрын
20 +year welder here , ya nailed it Tony even simplified it for everyone very very well. Nice
@aae77252 жыл бұрын
I remember reading a scientific journal article on cracking in axle housings caused by the manufacturer using pulse MIG. The varying penetrating was causing stress. They went back to spray transfer CV. Pulse MIG is great on aluminium vertical up, I wouldn't use it on steel.
@ThisOldTony2 жыл бұрын
interesting!
@boallmon3242 жыл бұрын
Good to see whittle tony back again. I learn a lot
@markchisholm26572 жыл бұрын
In critical welding applications - oil and gas pipelines for instance or structural welds - no matter how good the weld they are dressed (ground) to ensure that there are no stress raisers. There have been multiple heavy crane sheave failures on fabricated not cast sheaves due to weld stress on older non dressed welds. Subsea pipelines which by their very nature are not accessible are checked even when machine welded and then cleaned up to remove any areas which may lead to problems later on. In other words there is no such thing as a perfect weld that is so clean it can be left un ground on modern high end applications.
@lunchboxproductions11832 жыл бұрын
This is not true at all if you're implying the entire weld is "dressed". The only thing that gets ground on oil pipeline welds are the wagon tracks in the root pass and maybe to touch up the start/stop on the cap.
@jimdarhower49452 жыл бұрын
@Lunchbox Productions - right? That was a pretty batshit crazy thing to proclaim as absolute truth.
@valkman7612 жыл бұрын
Yeah, a high crown weld needs to be dressed not to make a stress riser. That's how you do it. And by the way, who are these guys who always pick up on the topic of pipes and critical joints, stress members where people will die if the welder even blinks while welding? It's bad engineering if only a 100% perfect weld will keep it intact. 99,9% of what people use MIG/MAG for is fabrication. You rarely have to weld the entire structure to ascertain it's rigidity. Few short welds would be enough. Seriously, try checking welded structures and you rarely see full welds all around the profile. You're just wasting money on gas, wire and electricity doing so
@geoffmooregm2 жыл бұрын
@@valkman761 Agreed. You should see some of the old pipeline welds I inspect 😳. Keep in mind it was the 50's when they were welded. They have a concave cap, un ground stop/starts, arc strikes all over and even the odd pore. When we do an integrity dig they get a sleeve 99% of the time. But in all these years they have held up fine. No way in hell they would be acceptable today to any CSA, ASME or API code.
@corentinnaisse53502 жыл бұрын
I've been working for more than 10 years in the space and defense industry and I've yet to see a ground weld (unless its for a tolerance fit on a bearing surface, and it is done after passing all verifications). They are all TIG welded and are thoroughly inspected to ensure consistent penetration and limited HAZ. Only cleaning done is to remove the oxydation layer with a wire brush or scotch brite (depending on material) and final cleaning with MEK.
@DraconBS2 жыл бұрын
Awesome video, thank You Tony! As a MIG welder i can say that longer distance from torch to material gives good looking weld, but less penetrated. When You see that weld is going too hot, You can go faster or just add a distance from tip to material. Short distance gives also more splatter inside torch and shorter life of cooper tip. "Pushing" torch (7:07) gives wide and less penetrated weld. "Pulling" (0:48) gives narrow and deeper melted weld. Holding torch in right angle to material gives someting inbetween. Usually about 10-15 degrees from right angle is optimal. Too sharp torch angle gives much splatter, but sometimes gives posibility of welding thin material with high current.
@forrest2252 жыл бұрын
On the subject of fumes, just get a bigger shop. That way the accumulation of crud in the air is slower and less noticeable. Well, until the end of the day when you’re blowing weld bead out of your nose.
@glenns56272 жыл бұрын
I have the biggest welding shop in the world. Most people call it "outdoors", but then again, most people wouldn't call that a "shop" either. Say, isn't that the purpose of a shop, to concentrate the fumes to lethal levels while you work?
@forrest2252 жыл бұрын
@@glenns5627 Absolutely, but you need to hit the sweetspot where the accumulation is slow enough that you don't notice it until its far, far too late.
@jonmccormick68052 жыл бұрын
@@forrest225 dain Bramage am mine name
@C-M-E2 жыл бұрын
Much like your significant other, playing with a welder's knobs if the best part of getting to know new equipment. Delicate, precise knob manipulation. You heard it here first. 😎
@MrDigitalCypher2 жыл бұрын
Great Video Sir! A bunch of good information in here to share with new welders that is shared in an honest easy to relate way. I show all of my new techs your videos if they want to start get a foundation to build their skills on.
@thiagocardosoramos77302 жыл бұрын
Always good to see a new tot video on my feed, i don't mess with any of this (welding (i just weld eletronics), cnc, lathe, etc.) but i enjoy the heck out of these videos. Thank you Tony
@Dude-mz8su2 жыл бұрын
TOT! Where are you? We miss you!
@UilliamTighearnaigh2 жыл бұрын
Just watched again. Loved it all over again. Spanks for posting.
@heatshield2 жыл бұрын
Every time I watch a bunch of your old videos, you upload a new one within a day, so here I am letting you know I've done that. Hope I didn't jynx the pattern by talking about it.
@juanitoalkachofa2 жыл бұрын
yeah You did it
@heatshield2 жыл бұрын
@@juanitoalkachofa lol dangit!
@heatshield2 жыл бұрын
@@juanitoalkachofa I was off by about a week, but it still worked. New Vid Now! 😁
@FNSICK2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. I came in from the shop, overwhelmed with my current project. This video gave me inspiration to get back out there.
@RedDogForge2 жыл бұрын
im going through ToT withdrawl.. you ok Tony? its been a bit since this vid.
@andrewostrelczuk4062 жыл бұрын
3 years ago the guys at Saginaw welding supply introduced me to this kind of machine... 4 years ago I bought the previous Hot Ticket 180 Dual by Lincoln... and the spool gun soon to follow, to do that Al-You- Lini-mum! My old Champbell husfeld was good at Aluminum welding like pushing wet rope up hill on a stairway! And once upon a time in “The Big Army” in the Fulda Gap I used a Spool gun that had a Rheostat trigger with a hook loop that controlled the wire feed speed... the more you squeeze the faster the wire came out... After a long while of goober and grind, I found the tape trick and some consistency in my welds. As the spools ran out fast I had some rolls of 11# spools of .035 Aluminum wire to put on to 1# spools to weld the Aluminum (that was a Royal pain in my 3rd point of contact...) Our BMO (Battalion Motor Officer) motor pool Chief, A CW4 (Chief Warrent Officer (AKA GOD of the motor pool) asked me why I had Electrical tape around the middle finger of my welding glove... that, was to not squeeze the trigger to far... As I was getting the corner of a 113A2 armored personnel carrier’s fender reconstruction done. It was torn up by the steel tracks rotating up from another track parked too close and then turning away too soon in our over crowded motor pool parking lot. After about 22 pounds of aluminum wire it was as good if not better than new considering that it was a solid fender corner compared to 3/4” plates of aluminum welded together. And you couldn’t even tell it had been in an accident and it was close to being scraped because of the cost of sending it back over seas to get repaired at Depot. I learned welding in Middle school metals class them machine shop and welding classes in High School. Along with Vocational Auto 1-2&3, Independant study welding was my senior year extra class I helped the instructor with the introduction to metals first year students I had already take Metals technology 1&2 ( yes in High School) machining CNC was off sight and I didn’t want to go there. So I was an industrial technology geek! I even taught my Heavy construction equipment repairer course, instructors stick welding after classes before they covered it for the rest of my class at the time, in Ft Leonard-Wood MO. Had the Honor Grad position with the highest End of Cycle Test Score, and the Highest overall class test scores in the history of the course up to that time. But I missed all the Honors and accolades because I was shipped out to Airborne school, two days before graduation! It took 36 hours to go by Bus from Ft Lenard-Wood MO. To Ft Benning GA. Now I’m Retired and with 4 MOS’s (Military Occupational Specialties) I’ve had enough education for 2 BS degrees and I’ve got zero. But Army Continuing Education Service’s counted me as having 236 Credit hours... ( Some College) I believe that you can love and fully understand this...
@WickedTools2 жыл бұрын
YAAAY 😄😄😄😄 Tony you always make my day when I see you in my sub box
@MonstertruckBadass2 жыл бұрын
@Don't Read My Profile Photo Delete your account
@pappyweasel77662 жыл бұрын
I'm patiently waiting for the invention of the "spray-on" weld, you know, from a can... Like hairspray, so I can make steel projects like my late father ( welder on the Gateway Arch) and my brother (this man can weld water), who calls me the wood whisperer, because I can't weld but I'm good with toothpicks ? Lol
@deth30212 жыл бұрын
Well spray weld is a thing so....
@ZILAwelds2 жыл бұрын
Pappy Weasel, sorry to tell you ….you are late to the party. Spray welding ( mostly for shaft overlays, build up or hard surfacing was invented decades ago ….
@pappyweasel77662 жыл бұрын
Yes, butt,... Is it like Hairspray...hmm? Meaning it's a product rather than a method or technique that takes many hours of apprenticeship exercising, late night cramming in last minute test welds so you can get a good coupon? hey look, a squirrel! I feel so misunderstood sometimes 😃
@thomasa56192 жыл бұрын
I can recommend sikaflex I lay sick beads with that
@pappyweasel77662 жыл бұрын
@@thomasa5619 I can as well. Yes ago when I was an apprentice (before I understood patience) I couldn't get anything to look good without tooling the whole joint with a wet finger, I had to use that technique in secret though, the owner of the company I have to get it perfect right out of the tube, he was oddly similar to the last part of the human body spent fuel touches when it leaves the building. Isn't vulcanization just about the best thing since the blimp? Man, what a Goodyear!
@oskimac2 жыл бұрын
You don't fool me TOT. You sure have a production team. 3 or 4 truly talented writers. A camera, sound and light crew. And of course a big Post production editing team behind the channel. Came on
@ugetridofit2 жыл бұрын
TOT, its been over a couple months since last video. I need a TOT laughter recharge please.
@rbhe3572 жыл бұрын
Finally. I've been watching and waiting lifetimes for a ToT Mig video. I had almost accepted that he was another one of those Tig snobs....
@seansullivan37952 жыл бұрын
Where in the hell are you?!!!! missing your videos even though I only comprehend half of them!
@meetv77002 жыл бұрын
Finally This Old Tony showed up. Faith in humanity is restored. ❤️
@bishipc1172 жыл бұрын
i have no other way to communicate to you. where are you at? i miss the videos!!!!. can you let us know whats going on. please
@RocketGurney2 жыл бұрын
Wow hey, this video dropped just as I was about to start a weekend welding project! How apropos!
@BeezyKing992 жыл бұрын
😭😭Missing you TOT.... hope all is well your way.
@Woodshot482 жыл бұрын
Absolutely love the videos Tony. I've been subscribed for about 4 years now an you never fail to have me laughing my ass off. Love the sense of humor. Thats prolly why I've watched ever one prolly a dozen times. But you rock an hope you feel better man an take care.
@Arkios642 жыл бұрын
"If I've got my Lathe settings right, we live in an age where welding is a thing." Damn, I almost had to spin up my own, manual Lathe (by spinning myself in place) to go back to a time when this was a current running joke.
@dansihvonen82182 жыл бұрын
In welding the current is no joke. And isn't running while welding a little ... odd?
@aussiebloke6092 жыл бұрын
That joke never goes away, it just lurks in the corner and waits for the unwary to wander by.
@DestroManiak2 жыл бұрын
this channel is a gift to mankind 🥰🥰
@Sad0felix2 жыл бұрын
Hi, I have barely any welding experience aside a course+exam I attended to in UK in '16. That was about aluminium, and it was aimed at car body shops to get certified for the big T electric car manufacturer. It was based on Fronius welders, synergy, pulse, and all the B&W. I never welded steel with that, I recall on AL it was all about amps, frequency was much lower, down to 40Hz for very thin coupons, and 4 stage trigger was a very interesting feature, although strange to weld without keeping a button pushed. You chose general piece thickness, then you could tamper with the finer settings to best suite your ”hand”. I remember also the symmetry of alternating current would play a role. Welded coupons were selected or discarded based on length of bead (neither too long or too short) height, regularity, no overpenetration (no bubbles on the other side), then cut, the central inch bathed in acid to highlight penetration, then the trainer would examine them with fancy microscope with reference ruler to see % (minimum = 20% pen) Either way, I qualified despite all expectations, and even before deadline, and that has left me the idea that nowadays these modern machines are very, very easy to get up and running, and get used to, allowing even inexperienced people like me to get decent results. Of course, from decent to ”work of art” the distance is still challenging, but structurally-wise, I have no complaints. Thank you for reminding me nice stuff, TOT, your content is always great to look at! Cheers from Italy!
@VailsMom2 жыл бұрын
What my husband did for me today is nice and all. BUT… Tonight, I got to watch Tony’s video. Happy Mother’s Day to ME.
@NcWraith2 жыл бұрын
Dear This Old Tony, we miss you. Get your act together mister
@Vault13372 жыл бұрын
Finally, the old This Old Tony video vibes I missed for long! I hope Tony finally left every problem behind!
@nobodynoone25002 жыл бұрын
Miss ya man.
@morebetter79012 жыл бұрын
tOt not-to-subtlety taking the piss out of most yt welding channels, with some hard rock welding montage. 😁😁 Love ya.
@Guds7772 жыл бұрын
Tony pleas come back to us friendo...
@jamescole68462 жыл бұрын
Out of the billions of YT videos I probably watched since 2005 when YT was born. There are probably less than 5 channels I watch every single of minute of. Keep up the great content. I have been looking at these but I think I will stick with non-smart ones. Video Notes: first of video bangs tip on surface says keep your tip clean. End of video says don't do that, it breaks stuff. We've all been there :) and as for not wearing your gear. You get eyeball sunburn enough times or have one of those hot boogers land on your hand a few times and you will learn that as well.
@GunganWorks2 жыл бұрын
Don’t be a hipster welder: Never pick up your metal before it is cool.
@michaelcothran40642 жыл бұрын
Thank You Tony this is what I shall order, I've been machining for 49yrs & I've cut all kinds of weld but always wanted to learn now technology may allow me to experiment, LOVE your vids!!!