Thanks for the feedback, I'll hit it with some 6011 rod tomorrow. That should get a lot better penetration I think.
Sounds good, I would have never thought of that myself. Great feedback is why I joined this forum![]()
Use 6010 or 6011 for penetration on the root. Cap it with 7018 or similar for overall strength. 6011 more prone to fatigue induced cracking.
A good rule of thumb is to never rely on 6010 / 6011 for strength by itself.
You are the first person I have ever heard say to not trust a 6010/11 for strength. We use multi pass 6011 AC(for extreme arc blow) vertical down(heat control/close proximity to plastic) extensively on heavy industrial equipment lifting attachments without a 7018 cap.
A good weld is always stronger than the metal itself. 6011 or 6010 rod has a tensile strength of 60000psi where typical mild steel is only 45000psi.

Well, I am a novice welder and i appreciate any help i can get. Since my little 150 mig welder couldn't get enough penetration, i picked up a lincoln ac 225. Huge difference! Made some pretty ugly welds with the 6011 but came out much nicer with 7018 over the top. I probably added 3 lbs to the tongue but i don't think it will ever come apart![]()

The puddle formation and freezing of F3 rods tends toward increased stress risers and lower resistance to fatigue cracking.
I have used 6010 for high vibration piping as well as lifting applications. All of us welders have used f3 rods extensively without any kind of backup and we know its good.
For an experienced welder, it is not a problem. For a novice welder, on a trailer tongue, with difficulty getting penetration, i would not recommend a rod prone to fatigue cracking or stress risers without a secondary or tertiary cap to dispel as much stress as possible.
a good 6010 weld does not have 60KSI tensile strength. A good 6010 weld has a 60KSI MINIMUM tensile strength. There a very big difference in the two. We all know a good weld will outlast the strength of the parent material and will fail in the HAZ.
However, we are not talking about a good weld. We are talking about a novice welder that is having difficulty.
A lot of experienced welders forget to look at the context of the information being given in relation to the experience of the person the information is meant for. You dont explain the universe to a 3 year old do you? No.
No harm, no foul.
PAIGEJ ... i mean no disrespect you to by saying you are a novice welder. This is not meant to be an insult to you. We all learned to weld and we were all novice welders at some point.![]()
PaigeJ, why didn't you just get one of these?
![]()
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004QEM78Y/?tag=atomicindus08-20
Am I missing something? Likewise, no disrespect. The curiosity is bugging me.
I built a PWC shop stand based off a picture on the internet, then some of my own ideas tossed into the mix. Took a little longer than expected , but the next couple should go really easy. This first one was about 4in to tall
My buddy gave me 14ft of 2x2 .12 so I made than my base frame because I wanted a tray to hold parts etc. Then I used 1.5" .120 for the uprights, and some 1/4 angle to hold the ski. It is completely over kill but most metal was free and I am swapping to the entire frame will be made from 1.5" but can't decide on thickness 20ft of .120 1.5" was 54.00
Also would (4) 6"x6" 1/8 plate bolted to strong casters, then welded to the square tubing at each corner, be strong enough for a 1200 pound jet ski?
I'd want to gusset those corners if you're going to be putting a jetski on top of that frame. Since you're going to push this around loaded, you're asking for that frame to turn into a parallelagram. Small corner gussets will definitely prevent that.
Plus... gussets look cool.![]()

Made a fixture for a turbo manifold
Nice TIG weave there. Looks great.
Mike.
Planning to make a lot of those manifolds?
SOLID fixture!
Did you check the runout on that flange (both the long one for the head and the turbo flange fixture after you made it? with that much heat I wouldnt be surprised if it warped. especially the really long head flange.
I like to use a spare head if i have one or can find one cheap.
Matt
I built an RV gate for the side of my house, and as added peace of mind I added a wheel. It really didn't need one, but I wanted to make sure that this 11 1/2 wide x 8 foot tall gate didn't sag. Well my driveway is sloped away from the house so the wheel had to follow the terrain slope. After a lot of head scratching, I came up with this.
![]()
![]()
![]()

I built an RV gate for the side of my house, and as added peace of mind I added a wheel. It really didn't need one, but I wanted to make sure that this 11 1/2 wide x 8 foot tall gate didn't sag. Well my driveway is sloped away from the house so the wheel had to follow the terrain slope. After a lot of head scratching, I came up with this.
![]()
![]()
![]()
I built an RV gate for the side of my house, and as added peace of mind I added a wheel. It really didn't need one, but I wanted to make sure that this 11 1/2 wide x 8 foot tall gate didn't sag. Well my driveway is sloped away from the house so the wheel had to follow the terrain slope. After a lot of head scratching, I came up with this.
![]()
I built an RV gate for the side of my house, and as added peace of mind I added a wheel. It really didn't need one, but I wanted to make sure that this 11 1/2 wide x 8 foot tall gate didn't sag. Well my driveway is sloped away from the house so the wheel had to follow the terrain slope.

I built an RV gate for the side of my house, and as added peace of mind I added a wheel. It really didn't need one, but I wanted to make sure that this 11 1/2 wide x 8 foot tall gate didn't sag. Well my driveway is sloped away from the house so the wheel had to follow the terrain slope. After a lot of head scratching, I came up with this.
![]()
![]()
![]()
I love it. Thanks for sharing.