Who'd thunk it, so many with family that worked/welded on ships during WWII. The information that comes out of woodwork when a question asked here is amazing.



Pop welded on liberty ships in savannah, the welding he did was stick. He said he remembered seeing them lay a track out on the deck and put a welding machine that fed #9 wire and it had a hopper attached that drizzled what he thought was flux.
I did get a chance to weld together full sheets of 2" thick steel using a submerged arc welder. THis thing was cool and looked old fashioned but it was a cart that fed pencil sized bare wire and dumped granular flux onto the puddle.
You might want to check out this website and contact these people..This is one of only 4 fully-operational WWII ships in the country...It's docked here in Tampa...
http://www.americanvictory.org/
Somewhere out there, there is a black and white photo of a ship's deck being welded by dozens of ladies under umbrellas to protect them from the hot sun. I would imagine it was in California but I'm not sure. I've always thought that was a very cool picture. If anyone comes across it, please post it up.
Thanks TampaGT. I visited then bookmarked this page. tom
I fitted for a pipe welder on a skid job.Interesting side note, the Liberty ships had a bad problem of cracking and splitting in the middle. Not due to bad welds, but due to bad metallurgy. The steel was crappy and had a ductile-to-brittle transition temp that was too high. In cold water the steel would transition and the ship could split.
Photo of submerged arc welding I took a couple of years ago. Welding the side plates for a box girder for a bridge widening.
![]()
