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listen, I could try and give you a step by step... but it's kinda like giving directions to the airport after going there in a cab. I'd miss a turn and you'd never make the flight.
In Brian's :yay: case this means sitting around watching the other guy do all the work
My guess is, it was cut with a plasma, cleaned up with a small angle head, the bottom gap was filled by spreading the base of the bracket with a BFH, and it was MIG welded using 75/25 mix and spooling L56 SuperArc, welded vertical down.
That's just a guess since I wasn't there.
Good call Darrell. That is exactly how I did mine.
Sorry I could not make it down Brian, I ended up workiing until 3:30 on saturday.
ASM REAPER BUGGY ON 40'S SOLD
00 TJ ON 37'S SOLD
97zj ON 36'S SOLD
ah ok. well all my beads look like ass. guess i might sign up for the weekend welding class this spring/summer. Your beads and Chris' look quite clean. thanks for the pix!
Like Blaine said, vertical down (I won't use the term VD as it could get confusing ) is much easier.
I'm not an expert welder, but my understanding is: as heat rises from the welding, traveling vertical up causes excessive heating of the metal and your molten puddle (compared to the machine settings you started with) which makes it difficult to control the puddle...at least that what it looks like through the lens when I try it.
I can weld vertical up, but I end up having to stitch weld it and avoid one continuous bead or it ends up looking like bird droppings.
Overhead MIG welding is another tough one, at least for me, but I'm getting the hang of it.
Side Bar: Hey, Chris. Nice to see you again. BTW, what did you use to bend the rear AR arms to clear the shock tower?
Like Blaine said, vertical down (I won't use the term VD as it could get confusing ) is much easier.
I'm not an expert welder, but my understanding is: as heat rises from the welding, traveling vertical up causes excessive heating of the metal and your molten puddle (compared to the machine settings you started with) which makes it difficult to control the puddle...at least that what it looks like through the lens when I try it.
I can weld vertical up, but I end up having to stitch weld it and avoid one continuous bead or it ends up looking like bird droppings.
Overhead MIG welding is another tough one, at least for me, but I'm getting the hang of it.
Side Bar: Hey, Chris. Nice to see you again. BTW, what did you use to bend the rear AR arms to clear the shock tower?
John has a special die they made for their big 100 ton shop press. Lay the arm in it, mash it, comes out with the offset in it.
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