Howdy,
Many people buy stick welders and make trailers out of steel tubing with them. So it strikes me as strange to now be reading that square/rectangular steel tubing is one of the hardest things to stick weld, especially in the thinner-walled tubing. Maybe trailers are usually made with the thicker-walled tubing?
Anyway, I think I should, in keeping with my ability, use the thickest-walled tubing I can, but it gets very expensive when you get to 3/16"! So, I'm going to go get some 14g tubing to practice with. Chucke2009 says it's the thinnest he would consider stick welding (video at end). I know I can't do what he does though, so I may have to get some thicker. Anything worth doing is worth learning to do, so I'll be having fun practicing for a while.
I will practice with 3/32" rod and avoid 7018 although I have had the most luck with 1/8" 7018 on 1/4" practice plate stock. One thread says 6011 (6011 vs 7018), is best because of control, but the aforementioned Chuck (same video 6013 vs 7018), says 6013 because it was made for thinner metals and so has less penetration. I have DC from my tombstone so I assume DCEP or should I be thinking 7018 with DCEN?
Oh, these are for mobile tools stands in the garage and won't go over 1 mph, but I want to learn to weld this tubing as I would weld more structurally critical things.
Somewhere, someone in a video showed how the weakest point of any weld is at the ends or most extreme locations, so it was best to weld tubing from the center of one flat around the corner to the center of the adjacent flat (can't find the link). This way the weakest points, the corners, would not be where the welds start and stop. But WeldingFever must know what he's doing because he has hats, and didn't do that on something he needed to be structurally strong (video at end).
So here's the plan so far:
Do I practice going from flat to flat instead of corner to corner, or does no one really do that, even on trailers?
Thanks,
-- Dunn
Chucke2009 video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYlDdr9-xhw
Welding Fever video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7IHGYdkKHD0
Many people buy stick welders and make trailers out of steel tubing with them. So it strikes me as strange to now be reading that square/rectangular steel tubing is one of the hardest things to stick weld, especially in the thinner-walled tubing. Maybe trailers are usually made with the thicker-walled tubing?
Anyway, I think I should, in keeping with my ability, use the thickest-walled tubing I can, but it gets very expensive when you get to 3/16"! So, I'm going to go get some 14g tubing to practice with. Chucke2009 says it's the thinnest he would consider stick welding (video at end). I know I can't do what he does though, so I may have to get some thicker. Anything worth doing is worth learning to do, so I'll be having fun practicing for a while.
I will practice with 3/32" rod and avoid 7018 although I have had the most luck with 1/8" 7018 on 1/4" practice plate stock. One thread says 6011 (6011 vs 7018), is best because of control, but the aforementioned Chuck (same video 6013 vs 7018), says 6013 because it was made for thinner metals and so has less penetration. I have DC from my tombstone so I assume DCEP or should I be thinking 7018 with DCEN?
Oh, these are for mobile tools stands in the garage and won't go over 1 mph, but I want to learn to weld this tubing as I would weld more structurally critical things.
Somewhere, someone in a video showed how the weakest point of any weld is at the ends or most extreme locations, so it was best to weld tubing from the center of one flat around the corner to the center of the adjacent flat (can't find the link). This way the weakest points, the corners, would not be where the welds start and stop. But WeldingFever must know what he's doing because he has hats, and didn't do that on something he needed to be structurally strong (video at end).
So here's the plan so far:
- Use 14 gage tubing (start thicker or is this good);
- Use either 3/32" 6011 or 6013 (I'd like to learn with the strongest for when I need that, so is that 6011?);
Do I practice going from flat to flat instead of corner to corner, or does no one really do that, even on trailers?
Thanks,
-- Dunn
Chucke2009 video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYlDdr9-xhw
Welding Fever video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7IHGYdkKHD0