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Show us your welding projects

silentpoet

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 21, 2011
Messages
795
Gotta have pictures or you have to turn in your 'man' card...

:lol_hitti

Here is the project in progress.





I know the weld is ugly. I just ran out of wire about the time I had the heat and wire speed figured out. But the basic plan is sound, I just sized it to the cup I had bought earlier. I just looked around the scrap pile and saw the piece of rebar and the scrap of angle iron. I broke out the chop saw and cut the two piece to length, the third piece I was waiting to cut until I had the other pieces together. I tried to shape the ends of the two pieces so the other piece would fit when I welded it in. The rebar was really melting at first, had a hard time getting a good bead on it with that gap. I think I need to maybe tack some closer in to the base of the rebar and then let it cool and then build a nice bead. I had just about got to the point where I thought I understood the weld and **** suddenly no bright spark in front of me. Didn't realize my spool was that low. To be honest as ugly as it is, it would probably serve as a drink holder but I don't want to leave sloppy ugly work.
 
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Fyrme

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 28, 2012
Messages
2,231
Location
Green country, Oklahoma
looks great, fyrme

Really nice job on the gate.

Great job on the gate, what did you use to roll the top arch out of square tubing?

Thanks guys. This was a hired job I did for a lady. I paid to have the arches bent. $200 for the pair and I supplied the 2" square tubing. The two gates were powder coated after the welding was completed $100. I charged her $900 for the two gates, and I lost my *** on them. Should have charged $1200 to make a dime. With my time in labor, I think I made about $9 hr.:sad: But I made money on the fence I built her, so it was a wash.
 

alpinewhite

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 4, 2012
Messages
1,315
Location
Orange County, California, USA
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Impressive!! Makes me want to watch a Disney movie. :)
 

Grinder Bill

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2011
Messages
217
More from the bike build: saddlebag bracket from scratch: plasma to cut out the pieces which were finished on a belt grinder, lathe work to fab the bushings, welded using both mig and tig.

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Grinder Bill

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2011
Messages
217
More of the bike build. Rear fender @ about 80% done. Made from 3 pieces of 20g welded to a frame of 3/16 round. Electrical junction box made from 5 pieces of 20g and 4 pieces of 1/8 flat bar.

IMG_05421_zps0d571793.jpg
 

muckerbarry

Active member
Joined
Nov 7, 2010
Messages
28
Location
Kilkenny, Ireland
Thanks guys. This was a hired job I did for a lady. I paid to have the arches bent. $200 for the pair and I supplied the 2" square tubing. The two gates were powder coated after the welding was completed $100. I charged her $900 for the two gates, and I lost my *** on them. Should have charged $1200 to make a dime. With my time in labor, I think I made about $9 hr.:sad: But I made money on the fence I built her, so it was a wash.

Bummer that you didnt cover your costs, but you can certainly be proud of your work, those gates are beautiful.
 

wagzilla

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 11, 2012
Messages
604
Location
Arizona
working with rusted metal is hard and getting to do what you want is harder like some of the steel is cold rolled so it has a coating on it. had to burn it off.
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NAPPY

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 30, 2011
Messages
54
Location
san tan valley,az
Nothing crazy, just helpful. This is my oversized cherry picker. CL score a few years ago. Parts of it look hand made but I'm not sure. I added a plate to the bottom to set my bucket of chains, a place to put my handle and a holder for my cylinder. All made from metal in my stash. The large tubing holding my cylinder is welded to a piece of tubing that slides into a larger piece.
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Grinder Bill

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2011
Messages
217
More of the bike build: handmade horn cover & mount. The horn itself is attached to the back cup which is machined from 3/4" aluminum plate. The cup is an interference fit to the body and secured with set screws. Powder coated gloss black in a toaster oven.

IMG_04391.jpg


IMG_04721.jpg
 

wagzilla

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 11, 2012
Messages
604
Location
Arizona
More of the bike build: handmade horn cover & mount. The horn itself is attached to the back cup which is machined from 3/4" aluminum plate. The cup is an interference fit to the body and secured with set screws. Powder coated gloss black in a toaster oven.

That's coming out very nice!!:)
 

PCO6

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 25, 2008
Messages
4,573
Location
Newmarket, Ontario
I replaced the sill on one side of my Jeep Cherokee today. Rather than go with a replacement sill I decided to fabricate a slider out of 2"x6" tubing for added off road strength.

Here is the right side with the old sill cut out and the slider I made ready to go in after a bit more rust removal.
View media item 43614
Here the slider is tacked in with about 50 mig welds. The new floors will go in after the sliders. I posted in another thread that I was going to leave the insides of the frame rails bare steal and apply rust proofing (Krown) but I decided to paint them with POR15.
View media item 43615
I then added about 50 spot welds. This is the first time that I have spot welded 18 gauge sheet metal to 1/8" metal tube and it worked well. It's also welded along the inside from one end to the other.
View media item 43613
The slider is now in place. I had to trim a few inches off of the rear fender flare to fit the slider. A lot of guys cut the bottoms off their front fenders and take their sliders to the rear of the wheel well. This Jeep will see a lot of winter use and I don't want to have snow build up in this area. The way I did it allows for better drainage.
View media item 43616
Here it is primed in black ... now on to the floor boards.
View media item 43618
 
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Strouty

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
38,212
Location
Southern Maine
Mobile grinder stand, built from a truck tire rim and a piece of 8" pipe.

IMG_06811_zps19ae4668.jpg

What does the red lever do? (Does it open a wormhole to another dimension?, if so, you need to put a warning label on it.) Is it for moving the stand or do you just tilt and roll? Or is it to allow the grinders to rotate?

Either way, can you post some more pictures, that is a nice space saving setup. :thumbup:
 

Grinder Bill

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2011
Messages
217
What does the red lever do? (Does it open a wormhole to another dimension?, if so, you need to put a warning label on it.) Is it for moving the stand or do you just tilt and roll? Or is it to allow the grinders to rotate?

Either way, can you post some more pictures, that is a nice space saving setup. :thumbup:

:) The red lever lowers the landing gear and raises the whole unit about 1/8", allowing for one hand moves. There's 4 x 360* casters attached to a hinged hanger.

IMG_0689_zps8b525afe.jpg
 

cbacres

Well-known member
Joined
May 28, 2010
Messages
5,998
Location
SW Florida
Made a little more progress today. Welded the 1" gusset to the 2" x4" tubing. Started prepping the 4" pipe that will be on the under side of he tubing. Notched the pipe to fit around the gusset, fit great the first time, I'm real pleased with how this went. Will fit the other side next, and then add more pipe to reach the columns.Glad I have plenty of c clamps.



 

Grinder Bill

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2011
Messages
217
Grinder, neat set up.
How do you latch the hinge in the down position?

The red lever slips under a catch welded to the left side.

The trick to making this work is to first shim the stand to its final 'ride height', then build the hinged/wheeled frame and lever in place.
 

Man Cave

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 29, 2009
Messages
94
Location
southern Indiana
Grinder Bill, what is your project? I widened an FL style frame to use a 180 rear. That was 7 years ago and I'm now taking the same bike back to a 130 with a round swing arm. Tired of paying for wide rear tires. Basically bored with what I built and doing something different.
 

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Grinder Bill

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2011
Messages
217
Grinder Bill, what is your project? I widened an FL style frame to use a 180 rear. That was 7 years ago and I'm now taking the same bike back to a 130 with a round swing arm. Tired of paying for wide rear tires. Basically bored with what I built and doing something different.

Nice bike. And I hear ya on the wide rears; I went with 18's F&R, 140 on the front and 170 back. No one is currently making a 18x170 bias ply tire, so I'm forever searching for NOS Metzeler ME1's.

The frame is +2 up and out, +3* rake, FXWG trees, Al rims, extended swingarm and a shitload of hand made parts. 98"er with extra gonads.

0344d233-50b7-4c5c-8967-ef4b4592bfb2_zps4de7cc5e.jpg
 
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wagzilla

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 11, 2012
Messages
604
Location
Arizona
Nice bike. And I hear ya on the wide rears; I went with 18's F&R, 140 on the front and 170 back. No one is currently making a 18x170 bias ply tire, so I'm forever searching for NOS Metzeler ME1's.

The frame is +2 up and out, +3* rake, FXWG trees, Al rims, extended swingarm and a shitload of hand made parts. 98"er with extra gonads.

0344d233-50b7-4c5c-8967-ef4b4592bfb2_zps4de7cc5e.jpg
Nice I like the setup when will this be done?

I would love to build a bike Love the build from ******** in Germany I want to build the single swing are for the rear and have about 240 ish on the back.

James

James
 
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Grinder Bill

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2011
Messages
217
The bike was finished about 2500 miles ago. This winters project is a 103" S&S panhead in a '88 softail frame.

IMG_0668_zpsf9eb0ecb.jpg
 

ClintNZ

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 6, 2012
Messages
107
Location
Rotorua, New Zealand
Finished off the spare tyre carrier for the Landcruiser:

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Used a car door latch. Added some reinforcing to the rear bar too.

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Another recent project was a heavy duty dining table build with Rosie. Used a couple of cheap hardwood benchtops, had some 4" pipe & 8x2 timber lying around for the legs, so decided on an industrial look & got some flanges to join it up.

table3_zpsffbd66cd.jpg


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Cheers
Clint
 

Fyrme

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 28, 2012
Messages
2,231
Location
Green country, Oklahoma
All right, I finally found the build pics.......

IMG_1568 by Fyrme, on Flickr
IMG_1569 by Fyrme, on Flickr
IMG_1570 by Fyrme, on Flickr
IMG_1573 by Fyrme, on Flickr
IMG_1574 by Fyrme, on Flickr
IMG_1575 by Fyrme, on Flickr
IMG_1578 by Fyrme, on Flickr
And for those of you that haven't seen the finished product and don't want to go back...
Iron and Wood Gate by Fyrme, on Flickr
Iron and Wood Gate Front Side by Fyrme, on Flickr
Iron and Wood Gate Back Side by Fyrme, on Flickr
Iron And Wood Gate Short by Fyrme, on Flickr
 
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