Looking for some feedback on these beads.
The beads underneath are my attempt at 6010 weaves, next time I do some more 6010 weaves I'll post a picture as I really struggle with doing that well.
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Cactus Welder
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At first glance it looks like the amperage is too low and your travel speed is too slow. With the 6010 try small circles and maintain a tight arc.
Cactus Welder
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What size rods and how much lead angle
Last edited by Cactus Welder on Sat Jan 04, 2020 5:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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That’s about right with amperage. Speed up a little and straighten up your lead angle to around 5-10* You might also try a little longer arc length with the 7018
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The very round and flat ripples and cold shoulders indicate too slow travel speeds. With the 6010, try to make your circles about a 1/4” wide
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Okay. I'll try that.Cactus Welder wrote:The very round and flat ripples and cold shoulders indicate too slow travel speeds. With the 6010, try to make your circles about a 1/4” wide
Currently I just do straight drag, except for the weaving.
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Cactus Welder
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When I taught apprentice school welding, I taught drag for 7018 and circles for 6010/6011. Once the students got more comfortable I encouraged them to try different techniques for the different rods. Not everyone welds exactly the same and not all situations require the same techniques.
Wayne
Wayne
Cactus Welder
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The “toe” is the very edge where the weld meets the base metal. It should flow into the base metal almost seamlessly. Yours have almost right angles on them. You have the basic idea but need more practice. Understanding the fundamentals and practice practice practice.
Wayne
Wayne
Okay awesome thank you.Cactus Welder wrote:The “toe” is the very edge where the weld meets the base metal. It should flow into the base metal almost seamlessly. Yours have almost right angles on them. You have the basic idea but need more practice. Understanding the fundamentals and practice practice practice.
Wayne
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Here's three fresh 6010 beads.Cactus Welder wrote:The very round and flat ripples and cold shoulders indicate too slow travel speeds. With the 6010, try to make your circles about a 1/4” wide
80 amps
1/4in circles
Mostly 5-10 degrees lead angle.
Tighter arc
And faster travel speed.
Thoughts?
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Cactus Welder
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Those look much better. Keep practicing and focus on symmetry.
On the arc length, 6010/6011 like tight arc length, 7018 like a little longer arc length. At least that’s what I’ve found
Wayne
On the arc length, 6010/6011 like tight arc length, 7018 like a little longer arc length. At least that’s what I’ve found
Wayne
Okay noted, thank you.Cactus Welder wrote:Those look much better. Keep practicing and focus on symmetry.
On the arc length, 6010/6011 like tight arc length, 7018 like a little longer arc length. At least that’s what I’ve found
Wayne
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There's a couple times where a slightly longer arc length was favorable. Not too much longer; it's hard to describe in words. It's probably a difference of 0.75mm — 1mm or so. Just a very tiny minute difference, IMO.Cactus Welder wrote:Those look much better. Keep practicing and focus on symmetry.
On the arc length, 6010/6011 like tight arc length, 7018 like a little longer arc length. At least that’s what I’ve found
Wayne
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Oscar wrote:
There's a couple times where a slightly longer arc length was favorable. Not too much longer; it's hard to describe in words. It's probably a difference of 0.75mm — 1mm or so. Just a very tiny minute difference, IMO.
I agree. From my experience the 6010/6011 are less tolerant of varying arc lengths than the 7018. I’ve long arced 5/32 7018 at 160amps to fill a groove and still look nice. It was almost like a globular mig weld. lol
Wayne
My 2 cents (and im no expert).
My understanding is that 6010 is a fast freeze rod. Its not really designed for weaving due to the fact that the puddle will solidify quickly. You might be able to do it, I'm sure some people can, but you probably have a higher chance of inclusions. I;d probably keep me width as small as I can meaning stepping outside the middle as little as possible otherwise doing a two pass weld with 6010/6011 rods.
7018 on the other hand you can weave all day. The wider you step outside the puddle the faster you will want to weave across the middle. Don't go crazy, but you can likely weave about in inch wide. Remember that you really only need to focus on the outside of the weave just like you are doing a grove weld. The middle will take care of itself. Watch the outside edge of the puddle to fill out the crater and prevent undercut.
You welds don't look bad, but a little slaggy. Remember to clean the slag really well after each pass, it is worth the time spent and will make the next pass go in a lot cleaner. If you are practicing at home just bust out the grinder if its going poorly to reset the coupon.
Cheers!
My understanding is that 6010 is a fast freeze rod. Its not really designed for weaving due to the fact that the puddle will solidify quickly. You might be able to do it, I'm sure some people can, but you probably have a higher chance of inclusions. I;d probably keep me width as small as I can meaning stepping outside the middle as little as possible otherwise doing a two pass weld with 6010/6011 rods.
7018 on the other hand you can weave all day. The wider you step outside the puddle the faster you will want to weave across the middle. Don't go crazy, but you can likely weave about in inch wide. Remember that you really only need to focus on the outside of the weave just like you are doing a grove weld. The middle will take care of itself. Watch the outside edge of the puddle to fill out the crater and prevent undercut.
You welds don't look bad, but a little slaggy. Remember to clean the slag really well after each pass, it is worth the time spent and will make the next pass go in a lot cleaner. If you are practicing at home just bust out the grinder if its going poorly to reset the coupon.
Cheers!
If you bump up your amps a little the bead will flatten out. Go up about 3 amps at a time till you find the sweet spot. If the plate is laying flat and it’s 3/8 or thicker then I’m guessing you’ll end up around 95-100 amps to get a flat bead with 3/32. Practice helps even more than turning up your amps. Slow down on your motion / whip, but keep up your travel speed. I find even when I try to hold still I still have a slight weave that develops. The slower you make your weave motions the smoother the weld will look.
I have more questions than answers
Josh
Josh
Some old pictures I had on file
One is just a socket weld fitting. The other two are from the base of a pedestal I made.
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- Attachments
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- A0163FB4-C759-43BC-AB3D-7F2B23D80673.jpeg (60.05 KiB) Viewed 4409 times
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- 6BB941F8-8933-40A0-A20C-D905A88D94A8.jpeg (51.46 KiB) Viewed 4409 times
I have more questions than answers
Josh
Josh
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