So I am finally setting up to start teaching the welding part of my Ag class for my student teaching. I am going to spend the rest of my time welding. I gave my cooperating teacher a shopping list for rods, wire, gas ect. I was hooking up the new mig welders. They are Millermatic 211 that they bought brand new last year. They had ran a 2 pound spool of ER70S-6 wire through the one machine last year. She had taught them how to mig weld and let them weld with it. I notice the machine had a lot of splatter marks on it for only being a year old. My Hobart 140 at home has half of the splatter marks on it and I have ran about 40 pound of flux core through it. I was hooking up the shielding gas and ask her where the regulator was and she looked at me straight face and said what is that? She told me that she never used that bottle and then started complaining about the machines saying how they were junk and didn't run right and all this stuff Needless to say I told her to add a regulator to the list of things I need. I am totally in shock right now
It's always best to build your own, especially when it comes to hitches!!!
Matt
Hey, I got my first welding experience in Ag. Mechanics and liked it so much that I majored in Ag. Ed. and taught Ag. Mechanics for 32 years. I teach welding part-time at a community college now and I can relate to what you are saying. Some of it is bad info, some is bad training and some of it is just dangerous. On the positive side there are some really good instructors out there, but most of the training did not happen in the teacher ed. programs.
I think that's great your gonna be able to teach the children the right way to weld. My only concern is who's gonna teach you so you can teach them Tony
Superiorwelding wrote:I think that's great your gonna be able to teach the children the right way to weld. My only concern is who's gonna teach you so you can teach them Tony
Apparently I need to sign out of the office computer during the day
-Jonathan