GeorgiaHybrid
Well-known member
A sleeved pipe, DONE RIGHT, is just as strong as the original pipe. You have already been welding and grinding on this tube however and I would be very reluctant to trust it in a safety cage. Can you buy another couple of tube sections? If they are still short, carefully fit the smaller tube and weld it and then fit the 1 3/4 leaving an even 1/8 to 3/16 gap around the joint.
This will allow a full pen weld using a backer bar (the smaller tube) and obtain a good weld.
What is this cage going to be used in? Do you need to pass a tech inspection? At the very least, have an experianced welder take a CLOSE look at the welds and explain to them how you made the welds.
Like I said before, I am not against anyone learning how to weld, I'm just against someone learning all of the positions and techniques on a safety cage. I grew up in a welding shop on an Air Force base and have welded off and on for 35 years and I would still not weld up a cage on one of my cars. At my age, I understand mortality and my comfort limits. I am a "hack" welder (unlike the old man) and can make it stick but not nice enough for a cage.
This will allow a full pen weld using a backer bar (the smaller tube) and obtain a good weld.
What is this cage going to be used in? Do you need to pass a tech inspection? At the very least, have an experianced welder take a CLOSE look at the welds and explain to them how you made the welds.
Like I said before, I am not against anyone learning how to weld, I'm just against someone learning all of the positions and techniques on a safety cage. I grew up in a welding shop on an Air Force base and have welded off and on for 35 years and I would still not weld up a cage on one of my cars. At my age, I understand mortality and my comfort limits. I am a "hack" welder (unlike the old man) and can make it stick but not nice enough for a cage.