Muggzy
Well-known member
"starts slow" definitely answers a few questions. May even help with the pinholes in getting at the start of my beads when I use the Hobart rods. I'll try 75 and see how it goes now that I've got better control. The reason the beads are so wide on my practice stuff above, is because I was watching and working on controlling the edges of my puddle, so I was making bigger circles with the tip of my rod than I would otherwise. When go to thinner metal I'll probably run a straight stringer bead with no zig zag or circles.Get a narrow tight bead. If it's cold it starts too slow and we get back to a big ole fat bead.
These are the beads that Dr_Clyde did for me as an emple and is pretty much the same thing he said about them. Since I can't just go up 5 amps on my machine, it's 65 or 75. For the material I'll be working with, 70 looks to be optimal, but I don't have that option.Near the end of the bead on the one you did at 75 is better. You should have to hurry. The big bead at 65 really took as much heat cause it was slow, but the edges are not well fused.
Thanks for the help, especially about starting slow at low current. I'll try higher.
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