Today was welding all day.
The morning was TIG class. Most of it taken up with the above project.
The instructor did give us our assignment for the final.
It is to be an inverted T shape, welded both sides attached to an inverted L shape with lap joints top and bottom. The L will have an outside corner joint.
We've been working in aluminum for most of the course. Very difficult. Very frustrating.
Have forgotten the little bit of steel we did at the start.
Thank goodness he gave us the choice to do aluminum OR steel.
This evening was a stick course I intended to use to finish the stick course where I didn't complete all the exercises in. But TIG has been so much fun and so challenging, I'v just been using it to get more TIG seat time, especially in aluminum.
So this evening I sat down with the intention of trying to get my steel TIG skills back up to snuff. I never really mastered them in the first place. My T joints were very sloppy, I couldn't do even a halfway decent lap, and hadn't even tried an outside corner.
But after all that aluminum work, the steel just seemed to flow. Really focused and just plodded through it, one thing after another until it was complete.
Not a great demonstration of skills, and I see all the mistakes. But it may be enough to pass the course.
Take a look and tell me what you think.
Bill
The morning was TIG class. Most of it taken up with the above project.
The instructor did give us our assignment for the final.
It is to be an inverted T shape, welded both sides attached to an inverted L shape with lap joints top and bottom. The L will have an outside corner joint.
We've been working in aluminum for most of the course. Very difficult. Very frustrating.
Have forgotten the little bit of steel we did at the start.
Thank goodness he gave us the choice to do aluminum OR steel.
This evening was a stick course I intended to use to finish the stick course where I didn't complete all the exercises in. But TIG has been so much fun and so challenging, I'v just been using it to get more TIG seat time, especially in aluminum.
So this evening I sat down with the intention of trying to get my steel TIG skills back up to snuff. I never really mastered them in the first place. My T joints were very sloppy, I couldn't do even a halfway decent lap, and hadn't even tried an outside corner.
But after all that aluminum work, the steel just seemed to flow. Really focused and just plodded through it, one thing after another until it was complete.
Not a great demonstration of skills, and I see all the mistakes. But it may be enough to pass the course.
Take a look and tell me what you think.
Bill
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