Lippyp
Well-known member
Looks like a trailer hitch to me! (or somehing a lady might keep in her bedside table!)
Got the front trans mount welded, bent, and mocked up in the car.
![]()
]
that's 1 single continuous pass, not zap.zap.zap.....
Musta sold his sole to da debil!
Here is my cart.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
mo info please.![]()
Next step now is the assembly of the main frame or the receiver of the plate panels. For starters, tacked welded all corner joints, insides, top and the corners.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
And after tacking each corner joints, started applying the welds :
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
mo info please.![]()
I know they're there.




are those all stitch welds? as in pull the trigger let off pull the triger let off pull the trigger let off and repeat? or one nonstop hold the trigger weld? looks amazing.
that's 1 single continuous pass, not zap.zap.zap.....
gotta be tig,no?,if that's mig,holy **** that's pretty!

It's ZTFab! His mad skills always seem to produce welds that look like that.
Musta sold his sole to da debil!
Steve

![]()
"ZTFab didnt weld that I welded that." -Helen 'Mama' Boucher

Hum....wonder why my pic did not post? Lets try it again!!!
Got my 5# bottle filled today with my usual 25% Argon / 75% CO2 mix for my mild steel welding.
I believe it is best to use straight Argon for stainless and aluminum welding. Will welding mild steel be any better or worse by also using straight Argon? I have a 20# tank which is waiting to be filled so that is why I am asking.
Got my 5# bottle filled today with my usual 25% Argon / 75% CO2 mix for my mild steel welding.
I believe it is best to use straight Argon for stainless and aluminum welding. Will welding mild steel be any better or worse by also using straight Argon? I have a 20# tank which is waiting to be filled so that is why I am asking.
Does anyone have feedback on the proper mixes and what result I will get if using a less desired mix (e.g. 100% argon with mild steel)?
It's ZTFab! His mad skills always seem to produce welds that look like that.
Musta sold his sole to da debil!
Steve

Although it may not look like it, there is a lot of TIG weld in the windshield frame.
![]()
Hey IONH....are you sure you get 25% Argon and 75% CO2?
The most typical steel gas mix is "C25" which is 25% CO2 and 75% Argon.
You technically "can" use straight argon for GMAW welding of steel but the arc would be erratic and the weld would lack penetration. With argon being a completely inert gas it needs to have at least a small amount of oxidizing gas like CO2.
The Percentages of the gases will change with material thickness and joint type because you may be running a different transfer mode like spray transfer vs short circuit transfer.
You can, and should, use straight Argon for aluminum or you could run an Argon/helium mix but that depends on the thickness of the aluminum you are welding.
Stainless Steel will require a "Tr-mix" of gases that include Argon, Helium, and CO2 in varying percentages and, again, that will be dictated by the thickness of material and transfer mode needed.
Interesting side note...MIG welding was invented for welding Aluminum and that's where it got the acronym, MIG (Metal Inert Gas). As time went on and the process was developed further for use on carbon and SS steels, the AWS decided that the acronym GMAW (Gas Metal Arc Welding) was more appropriate as the use of reactive gases was necessary for other metals.
Here is an article I've had saved for a while that explains different shielding gases and the different transfer modes.
Hope it helps.
Made this from some donated angle and $60.00 worth of 1/4" plate:
Amateur question. What is the purpose of a welding table made out of metal? Is it to avoid any other portable bench from catching fire or is it for grounding purposes or both?
flatness
being able to weld to it (jig table)
no catching fire
being able to beat the living hell outta somethin on it with a BFH