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> Welding Question, Newbie Mig welder here trying to make some plug welds
nathanxnathan
post Jul 1 2022, 10:12 AM
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I've been tig welding for the past 10 years and I think I'm alright at it, but I recently got a mig welder as I think some stuff I need to do on the car I need to go that route. I have a few questions...

So I got argon/co2 mix, I think 75/25, got some.023" wire.

First question, about plug welds, how big a hole should I drill? I saw this on the American Welding Society website

QUOTE
Per AWS D1.1

The minimum diameter of the hole for the plug shall be no less than the thickness of the part containing it plus 5/16(8mm) preferably rounded to the next greater odd 1/16". The maximum width shall equal the minimum width plus 1/8"(3mm) or 2-1/4 times the thickness of the member,which ever is greater.

For slotted holes it is the same as above except the length of the slot shall not exceed 10 times the thickness of the part containing it.

The minimum center to center spacing for plug welds shall be 4 times the diameter of the hole.
The minimum center to center of slot welds (traverse direction (this way II) shall be 4 times the width of the slot. Longitudinal direction (--) shall be 2 times the length of the slot.


The material I'm planning to use for repairs is 1 mm, so it's saying I need to make the holes 9 mm, which is 3/8 inch almost. —That seems really big given the size of the flange on most parts. Like it would be hard not to burn through the edge or both edges and make a mess to do that?

Other question is maybe a stupid question, but I find the torch this Hobart Handle 140 came with to be super awkward, like first of all it is gigantic coming from tig welding. Tig I always use a #7 or a #9 torch. This thing is like 2 sizes up from that equivalent it would seem. Secondly the button to weld is like a pistol — on the front/bottom of the torch, so it's really hard to weld on the bench. I have to put my elbow way up in the air to point the torch downward. I'm trying to angle it about 10º. So I get all shaky trying to do this, supporting it with my whole arm — I think my welds would be more controlled if a could weld with just my wrist, if I were able to support/rest my elbow on the table. If the button were on the top of the torch it would be more natural, to hit with my pointer finger. I guess a tig torch you can hold multiple ways, but the mig torch, I've tried holding it "the other way" and pressing the button with my thumb, but that's awkward, too. I'm not terrible if I use both hands — 1 to hold/stabilize it and 1 to press the button, but that seems dumb.

Here is a few practice welds, first pass at this. the right is me playing with voltage and feed, the leftmost is the 2nd , and then the middle last. Some of them is me trying with 2 hands, the better welds. Then the 1 hand, trying different holding positions I get off a bit. A few of them I was playing with "forging" the welds pounding them with a hammer to feel if they were harder than I'm used to as I've heard that about mig vs tig — they seem the same to me that way though.

Attached Image

The holes I drilled I are much smaller than 3/8, was going for something that seemed closer to what I'd want to do based on the typical size of a flange on most parts.

Maybe anyone has some insight on this?
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mb911
post Jul 1 2022, 11:23 AM
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So a few things.

1st what the heck is a #7,#9 TIG torch? I have never heard that before in my 26 years of professional TIG welding. Are you referring to the nozzle? The nozzle sizes come in many sizes. #7 means 7/16" opening and a #9 means 9/16"

As far as the handler. The gun is pretty small. My guess is you are holding it wrong and that is not uncommon.

I do as well use a 5/16-3/8" size hole for spot welds. I prefer to do them with MIG versus TIG only because of speed in an out.

Let me know if I can help. I teach it for a living.
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nathanxnathan
post Jul 1 2022, 01:13 PM
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QUOTE(mb911 @ Jul 1 2022, 10:23 AM) *

So a few things.

1st what the heck is a #7,#9 TIG torch? I have never heard that before in my 26 years of professional TIG welding. Are you referring to the nozzle? The nozzle sizes come in many sizes. #7 means 7/16" opening and a #9 means 9/16"

As far as the handler. The gun is pretty small. My guess is you are holding it wrong and that is not uncommon.

I do as well use a 5/16-3/8" size hole for spot welds. I prefer to do them with MIG versus TIG only because of speed in an out.

Let me know if I can help. I teach it for a living.


My bad, memory not serving me well there. I should have said WP17 and WP9 — somehow was thinking the smaller was a 7, but it's 17.

Here's a comparison of scale with the mig torch
Attached Image

It seems suited to hold like this
(IMG:http://www.914world.com/bbs2/uploads_offsite/cdn.thefabricator.com-21899-1656702819.1.jpg)

but only if you are welding on a vertical surface — when I try to weld on a table, which is most comfortable when I tig weld, I feel like I have to put my elbow up in the air to postion the torch at a 10º angle from the part which I've read is ideal.

Maybe there is a better way to hold it or maybe I should position the part at an angle. Maybe it's just not as versatile, mig welding, as I'm used to.

5/16 hole I think would work — I'm gearing up to do a repair on the car, and I don't want to do it wrong. It seems silly but I often have found on introspection that I will put something off if I don't know exactly how to do it. I'm trying to overcome and get to it, not let this project languish, so I guess ask some dumb-seeming questions.
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mb911
post Jul 1 2022, 01:43 PM
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QUOTE(nathanxnathan @ Jul 1 2022, 11:13 AM) *

QUOTE(mb911 @ Jul 1 2022, 10:23 AM) *

So a few things.

1st what the heck is a #7,#9 TIG torch? I have never heard that before in my 26 years of professional TIG welding. Are you referring to the nozzle? The nozzle sizes come in many sizes. #7 means 7/16" opening and a #9 means 9/16"

As far as the handler. The gun is pretty small. My guess is you are holding it wrong and that is not uncommon.

I do as well use a 5/16-3/8" size hole for spot welds. I prefer to do them with MIG versus TIG only because of speed in an out.

Let me know if I can help. I teach it for a living.


My bad, memory not serving me well there. I should have said WP17 and WP9 — somehow was thinking the smaller was a 7, but it's 17.

Here's a comparison of scale with the mig torch
Attached Image

It seems suited to hold like this
(IMG:http://www.914world.com/bbs2/uploads_offsite/cdn.thefabricator.com-21899-1656702819.1.jpg)

but only if you are welding on a vertical surface — when I try to weld on a table, which is most comfortable when I tig weld, I feel like I have to put my elbow up in the air to postion the torch at a 10º angle from the part which I've read is ideal.

Maybe there is a better way to hold it or maybe I should position the part at an angle. Maybe it's just not as versatile, mig welding, as I'm used to.

5/16 hole I think would work — I'm gearing up to do a repair on the car, and I don't want to do it wrong. It seems silly but I often have found on introspection that I will put something off if I don't know exactly how to do it. I'm trying to overcome and get to it, not let this project languish, so I guess ask some dumb-seeming questions.



You are holding it correctly if held like in the picture. You want to chicken wing it to hold correctly for both work and travel angles. Also not technically flat position is at an angle in the welding world but I am not going to go down that path right now. I really should do a video for all you guys.
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