marshalt
You guys are dicks...
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2004
- Posts
- 25,896
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I'd love to learn how to weld.
I'd love to learn how to weld.
Me, too! I think the masks are super sexy. Plus, you know, the sparks! I love fire.
...and if you don't wear a hood, you can get a George Hamilton tan.
I would probably turn to ash. My fair skin couldn't take the heat.
Way to be a ditzy bimbo!
but alts are super sexy..twirls hair...pathetic old woman![]()
I get nervous when guys are fixing stuff - I always get enlisted to help, and I always end up with some kind of pain.
I used to solder at a job I had eons ago. Can that be considered "light welding"?
It was on circuit boards for timing control devices.
That is closer to brazing where you heat up the two pieces to be jointed then let the metal from a bronze rod flow into the "pores" of the metal. Brazing and soldering are kind of like bonding with hot glue.
In welding whether by traditional smithing, or modern electric arc you heat the metal to the point that the steel has reached a melting point, displace the oxygen so that it doesn't oxidize and burn through the way it does with a cutting torch and then allow the two pieces to exchange molecules. It becomes one piece of steel if done right.
Modern MIG (metal, inert gas) uses a wire feet that also has a nozzle that dispenses either CO2 or CO2/Argon gas to gently pressurize all of the oxygen out of the area. As the wire feeds, if melts away. It is no harder to use than a glue gun.
The cheap wire-feeds MIGs work pretty well. They don;t sizzle quite the same and the bead isn;t as pretty but they work. For even less they have wire-feed welders that have an acid core like acid core solder. I have been using that sort of wire in my welder for a while because until recently I hadn't gotten around to replacing my stolen Co2/argon bottle and regulator.
Not enough, apparently...
We have an argon beam cautery that we use on certain tissues in the body. I imagine the concept is close to welding.
In that case argon is involved in generating a laser beam. The control is similar. A steady hand, control the heat, probably pulse it on and off as you need it.
I've borrowed a Mig-welder a time or two, but I don't trust it. Not hot enough. If my life is dependent on it, I stick-weld it with the big portable Lincoln.
To be honest the first picture looks like my work. Never put a little weld on something when a lot would be better.