What welding projects are you working on? Are you proud of something you built?
How about posting some pics so other welders can get some ideas?
BugHunter
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    Sun Apr 19, 2020 12:54 pm

Jody did a video a while back about a hammer he made. I modified the materials and dimensions some and made one for myself after work tonight. Figured it'd be a fun project, and it was.

waLv7XqTSJ4

Used 3/8 x 4 hot rolled stock and cut it into 1-3/4" pieces for the 4 sides, then one more piece cut in half for the two faces. Grabbed a hunk of DOM tubing I had laying around to make the handle.

In his video, I believe he said his was 1/4" steel 2x4 pieces and 2x2 faces. Also he had cold rolled so he didn't need the surface grinder. :lol:

Began with the dry-cut saw which did a beautiful job of cutting the parts. All of em, tubing, plug, and 3/8" flat stock. Didn't take any pics of that. :mrgreen: I don't think it took 15 seconds to cut 3/8" x 4 pieces. The saw cut so nice the 1-3/4" piece which was cut off didn't even move when the blade passed by and no part had any burr. Impressive.

Off to the grinder to make the parts look pretty.
IMG_20210126_144213783_MP.jpg
IMG_20210126_144213783_MP.jpg (65.29 KiB) Viewed 3689 times
IMG_20210126_144924905.jpg
IMG_20210126_144924905.jpg (46.71 KiB) Viewed 3689 times
Then went to the milling machine to get the parts equal width. There's no stop on my saw for part width.
IMG_20210126_151601671_HDR.jpg
IMG_20210126_151601671_HDR.jpg (86.71 KiB) Viewed 3689 times
Parts are ground and polished, drilled, tapped for the plug, and ready to start assembly.
IMG_20210126_161440820.jpg
IMG_20210126_161440820.jpg (84.74 KiB) Viewed 3689 times
Tacking up the parts
IMG_20210126_164721838.jpg
IMG_20210126_164721838.jpg (39.47 KiB) Viewed 3689 times
IMG_20210126_170213375.jpg
IMG_20210126_170213375.jpg (46.16 KiB) Viewed 3689 times
Welding up the thing. Yea, I didn't care that it got toasty!
IMG_20210126_174203300.jpg
IMG_20210126_174203300.jpg (40.53 KiB) Viewed 3689 times
Stuck the silicon bronze in the fillets and padded beads on the faces.
IMG_20210126_184252725.jpg
IMG_20210126_184252725.jpg (42.79 KiB) Viewed 3689 times
Ground the stuff off and had lots of areas that I felt were better off patching up rather than just grinding deeper to get all the low spots, so I did some touch-up with the SB.
IMG_20210126_190144788.jpg
IMG_20210126_190144788.jpg (42.12 KiB) Viewed 3689 times
Final product ready for me to figure out what handle to stick on it, and how to finish it up. Might paint the handle with clear, and I"m not sure what to do with the head of the thing. Who knows, maybe clear it all and just let the SB faces exposed after taping them off.
IMG_20210126_191303761.jpg
IMG_20210126_191303761.jpg (48.07 KiB) Viewed 3689 times
I haven't decided what to do with the handle. For balance I might stick a chunk of solid material inside the last 3 or 4 inches. Perhaps a press fit, jam it in with the arbor press then weld the thing fast at the bottom. Never can tell with me.

I should also mention, if you use 3/8" stock, probably ought to do a second fill pass with the ER70S2. Without, you're using a LOT of silicon bronze! :lol:
eelman308
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    Illinois....for now

Very cool! Hope Jody sees this post
User avatar
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BugHunter wrote:Jody did a video a while back about a hammer he made. I modified the materials and dimensions some and made one for myself after work tonight. Figured it'd be a fun project, and it was.

waLv7XqTSJ4

Used 3/8 x 4 hot rolled stock and cut it into 1-3/4" pieces for the 4 sides, then one more piece cut in half for the two faces. Grabbed a hunk of DOM tubing I had laying around to make the handle.

In his video, I believe he said his was 1/4" steel 2x4 pieces and 2x2 faces. Also he had cold rolled so he didn't need the surface grinder. [emoji38]

Began with the dry-cut saw which did a beautiful job of cutting the parts. All of em, tubing, plug, and 3/8" flat stock. Didn't take any pics of that. :mrgreen: I don't think it took 15 seconds to cut 3/8" x 4 pieces. The saw cut so nice the 1-3/4" piece which was cut off didn't even move when the blade passed by and no part had any burr. Impressive.

Off to the grinder to make the parts look pretty.
IMG_20210126_144213783_MP.jpg
IMG_20210126_144924905.jpg
Then went to the milling machine to get the parts equal width. There's no stop on my saw for part width.
IMG_20210126_151601671_HDR.jpg
Parts are ground and polished, drilled, tapped for the plug, and ready to start assembly.
IMG_20210126_161440820.jpg
Tacking up the parts
IMG_20210126_164721838.jpg
IMG_20210126_170213375.jpg
Welding up the thing. Yea, I didn't care that it got toasty!
IMG_20210126_174203300.jpg
Stuck the silicon bronze in the fillets and padded beads on the faces.
IMG_20210126_184252725.jpg
Ground the stuff off and had lots of areas that I felt were better off patching up rather than just grinding deeper to get all the low spots, so I did some touch-up with the SB.
IMG_20210126_190144788.jpg
Final product ready for me to figure out what handle to stick on it, and how to finish it up. Might paint the handle with clear, and I"m not sure what to do with the head of the thing. Who knows, maybe clear it all and just let the SB faces exposed after taping them off.
IMG_20210126_191303761.jpg
I haven't decided what to do with the handle. For balance I might stick a chunk of solid material inside the last 3 or 4 inches. Perhaps a press fit, jam it in with the arbor press then weld the thing fast at the bottom. Never can tell with me.

I should also mention, if you use 3/8" stock, probably ought to do a second fill pass with the ER70S2. Without, you're using a LOT of silicon bronze! [emoji38]
Do you take credit or cheque? [emoji846]

Sent from my SM-G970W using Tapatalk
BugHunter
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    Sun Apr 19, 2020 12:54 pm

JayWal wrote:[emoji38]Do you take credit or cheque? [emoji846]
You can throw one together in no time. I had maybe just a few minutes under four hours in it so far.

I'm tempted to take some torrefied Poplar that I have here at home and cut that into maybe 6 in Long strips that are in a keystone shape so they make a complete perimeter around the handle. Then J-B Weld them fast, turn them between centers in the lathe and shape them for your hand. Then sand and polish. Then take clear epoxy and coat the entire handle so you have a segmented wooden handle with clear epoxy to fill the joints, kind of like grouting them. Then before all that epoxy I could maybe turn in a few grooves and wire wrap in several places with stainless steel wire just for insurance to hold it together. Then have all that epoxy over with clear. I bet it would look cool.
BillE.Dee
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Nice, buggy. It's a bummer that I'm this far away.
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