RookieWelder
New member
I finally got some time today to spend under the hood, and I think I'm getting a LITTLE better. I brought the amps up to 105 with 1/8" 6013 on 1/4" plate and ran some beads. Still not great, but I'm still having fun with it (I still smile when I strike and maintain an arc!).
I tried slowing down some and concentrated on keeping the arc shorter (there were times that it felt like I was dragging the flux against the metal), but there was still some serious long arc moments. I suppose that with more practice, I will start to get a feel for moving the rod in as it gets consumed.
I did find that the rods burn up faster with the amps at 105 compared to the 90 or so I was using before. I'm using about 2/3 of an electrode to cover the 6" plate I'm working on, so I guess I am still moving too quickly. I'm still getting a fair amount of spatter - should I bring the heat up higher?
Here's a picture - I started at the top and welded every other bead, then flipped the plate around and welded in between the first set of beads. I dunked the plate in water after every 2 beads (this is only practice, so making the metal or welds brittle doesn't matter to me.).
Does this look like I'm on the right path?

Dwight
I tried slowing down some and concentrated on keeping the arc shorter (there were times that it felt like I was dragging the flux against the metal), but there was still some serious long arc moments. I suppose that with more practice, I will start to get a feel for moving the rod in as it gets consumed.
I did find that the rods burn up faster with the amps at 105 compared to the 90 or so I was using before. I'm using about 2/3 of an electrode to cover the 6" plate I'm working on, so I guess I am still moving too quickly. I'm still getting a fair amount of spatter - should I bring the heat up higher?
Here's a picture - I started at the top and welded every other bead, then flipped the plate around and welded in between the first set of beads. I dunked the plate in water after every 2 beads (this is only practice, so making the metal or welds brittle doesn't matter to me.).
Does this look like I'm on the right path?

Dwight