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Show us your welding projects

mattdwelder

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 16, 2012
Messages
73
Location
so-il
finished bed ready to be delivered
 

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makgreens

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 31, 2009
Messages
833
Location
ooltewah,tn
Been practicing my tig welding and making some odds and ends for the house and bike

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The table top was stained to match our chairs

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Temp headlight bracket till I decide what I really want

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Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

chykal

Active member
Joined
Mar 18, 2013
Messages
33
Been practicing my tig welding and making some odds and ends for the house and bike

y6e8uby5.jpg
hyjuhuva.jpg

The table top was stained to match our chairs

azy4y3a5.jpg

Temp headlight bracket till I decide what I really want

u7a4ynyq.jpg


y3emaha2.jpg
7e4egumy.jpg


vavudyzy.jpg

ytenyry8.jpg
a8u6evyj.jpg



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Nice bike project. Do you have a thread somewhere for the build?
 

ClintNZ

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 6, 2012
Messages
107
Location
Rotorua, New Zealand
Exhausting work....

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Actually not too tricky as it can be easily removed to do all the welding on the bench. Axle swap & suspension mods mean no room inside the chassis. Wider axle gives room outside it.

Anybody have an opinion on how close you can run an exhaust to a tyre? This will be about 3-4" away. Adding a heat shield would be pretty easy if it's needed. We don't get a lot of real hot days here & the big mudders will create plenty of airflow.

Cheers
Clint
 

Robert Hall

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 17, 2011
Messages
414
Location
Utah
I cleared enough junk to make a new bookcase. This is the skeleton. Fleshing the shelves after a little break.

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3/4 angle

Forgot to show the finished product...

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And I didn't want to chase the foot pedal around so I made up this momentary switch. That is a sanity saver.

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makgreens

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 31, 2009
Messages
833
Location
ooltewah,tn
Hey Robert what model dynasty is that? And what torch? Also I have the momentary switch if you need one...I switched to a foot pedal and won't ever go back


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Robert Hall

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 17, 2011
Messages
414
Location
Utah
It's the Dynasty 280. Thanks for the offer, but the switches were so much moola I made my own. I user the pedal when ever I can but being on the move the switch worked quite well.

Try using the pedal on a ladder or upside down :)
 

makgreens

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 31, 2009
Messages
833
Location
ooltewah,tn
Got any suggestions on cup sizes? Been using a 5&7 and it's helped me learn but want to find an all around size that's good


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Robert Hall

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 17, 2011
Messages
414
Location
Utah
Use the smallest one that maintains good gas coverage.

Too much gas can cause issues such as a venturi effect sucking outside air in the gas mix. That will cause problems.

If you start on stainless, a large cup can help. Stainless needs to stay cool.

I used a 7 on the steel there, 120 amps, 3/32 2% lanthanated tungsten.
 
OP
N

neonnblack

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 7, 2010
Messages
4,913
Location
Reno, NV
Finally got a small 40Cuft tank for the welder. Decided i now needed a welding cart. Nothing amazing, but useable, and get to work on it with my dad, so thats cool also. He got the cart (for free woohoo) from work, and it messed around with it a bit. This is being designed on the fly, so i really dont know how its going to end up.

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Hot Chop shop

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 12, 2013
Messages
628
Location
Las Vegas
I cleared enough junk to make a new bookcase. This is the skeleton. Fleshing the shelves after a little break.

qe5abepe.jpg


3/4 angle

Forgot to show the finished product...

jupedyha.jpg


And I didn't want to chase the foot pedal around so I made up this momentary switch. That is a sanity saver.

8anu7a5a.jpg

Nice work as always Robert.
How did you attach the wood to the sides?


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Robert Hall

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 17, 2011
Messages
414
Location
Utah
Thanks! The wood was attached like a vanir. I drilled holes in the steel frame , screwed it to the back wall and screwed the wood sides on. The shelf was built as a trough, that what's the shelf sits inside, covering the screws. I used two screws per shelf all the way up. Three-quarter inch wood screws.
 
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54worker

Member
Joined
Jun 27, 2014
Messages
8
Man, reading 124 pages sure is tough on a guy. But it did give me some great ideas. Joined this site just for this thread but anxious to read other threads. Thanks guys!
 

Robert Hall

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 17, 2011
Messages
414
Location
Utah
Finally getting around to building my TIG torch cooler.

Cutting the holes for the inlet bung and in/out ports

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Did a good fit up and tacked often to avoid warping.

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Set up for back gassing...

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Then to the welding...

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A little more to do but getting there.
 

MagnumForce

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 3, 2014
Messages
1,392
Location
Ohio
Would you guys be interested in odds and end stuff a capital maintenance guy fabs up for industrial use? Fairly mundane racks and stands usually but sometimes neat stuff like the trolley and roller conveyor system I just built.
 

MagnumForce

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 3, 2014
Messages
1,392
Location
Ohio
Here is what I have been working on this week at work.

Roller conveyors are a 10 foot sections with 2 foot sections at the ends. The center 2 sets closest together are welded as one piece together. Welded onto 4 x 3/16 inch plates with 5/8 inch holes to anchor them with 1/2 inch redhead concrete lags. 3 x 3 x 1/4 inch angle as a stop and the end and to keep forklifts from damaging the rollers more 5/8 holes there done with a mag drill since my drill press really wouldn't work well for a 147 inch piece of 3 inch angle like that.

The business end is a trolley system I came up with. More roller conveyor but with 2 1/2 x 1/2 cold rolled welded to the front and back with some great 2.5 inch wheels I ordered from McMaster Carr mounted to that. 1 inch tube handles welded to that and they roll on 1 inch angle with the point to the top, that has 2 x 3/16 plate with more 5/8 inch holes in them welded to the bottom of the angle at the outside of the trolley for clearance except on the ends. 1/4 x 2 inch plate stops finish it off.

My heights all worked out perfectly. If you are wondering what the heck it's all for empty Ropak Totes will come in on the center rollers and go onto the trolleys and to either side. Left is for a 40% rear split seat back and right is for the 60%. Once those totes are loaded down the rollers they go for the forklift to pick up. Will give us spots for 2 empties plus another stack of broke down empties in the middle where the forklift driver will drop them down as another set is used. Then 2 in process totes on the trolley of each part and then 3 finished totes on each side. Will save a lot of energy and space in the long run and the forklift driver can pick up a stack of three and head to the truck to ship out.

If anyone wonders these are Subaru Outback and Forrester seats. The conveyor, Robot and giant carousel resistance welder in the back is a hole other ball of wax as well as I did not build any of it but did do the installation. Next project is a reject rack going over the conveyor inside the cage that parts with defective welds will be dropped into. Still working that one out in my head but probably making a frame with one inch tube and then a sheet metal "chute" that I'll bend on the brake press. Figure out where to mount a prox switch so the robot knows a part is there and then design a door through the cage with another prox so the supervisor can reset everything as they pull out reject parts. Installed the cage today and have to finish off the end of it over the conveyor as well. haven't decided yet but I am probably going with something as simple as a piece of Lexan with the yellow floor striping tape around the edges so it looks better.

Never a dull moment for me at work, my boss moved to North Carolina 2 weeks ago so I am a one man show now. Learn something new every day and I absolutely love my job.
 

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Youngwing

Member
Joined
Jul 10, 2014
Messages
5
Building this little guy for my boss to make some noise. It's 4"xxh pipe for the barrel I used 20" we'll casing for the wheels give it a classic five spoke, to keep it looking semi historic has a oak tongue it's not quite finished but it's started
 

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ADSR

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 12, 2013
Messages
10,713
Building this little guy for my boss to make some noise. It's 4"xxh pipe for the barrel I used 20" we'll casing for the wheels give it a classic five spoke, to keep it looking semi historic has a oak tongue it's not quite finished but it's started

Cool! Is it made to shoot or just make noise?
 

ndr1968

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 18, 2012
Messages
207
Location
Oklahoma
I live in an old two story house that I cool with window unit air conditioners. There are some tricky tight corners to negotiate on the stairs when it comes time to take the upstairs ac’s out for cleaning. I looked all over the place for the narrower type two wheel dolly but couldn’t find anything available locally so I bought Harbor Freight’s cheapest one and decided to make a skinny out of a fatty.

I clamped the dolly to the table and measured where the axel should be to allow the tires to clear the frame and to let the plate rest pretty much flat on the floor with the dolly standing at rest. Then I fabricated a couple of temporary axel cradles to keep the axel in position while I tacked up the 1” x .125” extenders. I tacked the cradles on and after tacking up everything else they were cut off. I then welded everything permanently, cut the axel down and mounted the tires. Voila! Skinny dolly in a morning.
 

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ndr1968

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 18, 2012
Messages
207
Location
Oklahoma
And here's the rest of the build photos:
 

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