I am also a pipewelder for almost 30 years, but this is the first time I have seen such a good teacher like you. I think you are the best on RUclips, thank you from Greece.
Haha sure when a test made by ppl like Jody, if a random test was made by a chinchilla and 100 Jodys was having opinions would you argue or relay on the test ?
I've been welding going on 24 years now... I learned most of what I know from the older welders who weren't afraid to teach as "that is just how you do it"... and so.. it's how I did it and never really knew WHY... so to have the explanations given with such clarity is great and I can pass that info on to the newer guys that I teach tricks to occasionally. Thanks for preserving so much of our trade skill knowledge base and putting it in such an easy to understand format. I routinely suggest this channel to anyone who wants to weld or get better with their current skill set.
Videos like this one are the reason this is the best welding channel online. Detailed shots that show the effects of micro cracks of a poorly trimmed tungsten! Well done Jody, and on Christmas! This man never rests. Merry Christmas big guy, hope 2023 is your best year yet!
I’m a pipe welder in a shipyard. I use my angle grinder + diamond cutting disc to sharpen my tungsten. I drilled a hole in my grinder guard at an angle and use a drill to hold the tungsten. Comes out perfect every time.
Thanks for this. I went from novice mig welder with some experience with TIG, to food service. My industrial welding experience served me well over the years, but failed me on thin wall stainless in the food industry.
I agree whole heartedly with the 30 year vet. Before i broke out welding. Although i was in welding school, you were my teacher. Very informative, and great visuals. Some of the best arc shots and explanations on the internet. Thank you for your videos, Jody.
By far, the BEST, TIG tips and tricks and advice on RUclips! Hands down. I am a learning novice, and I TRUST you. The videos you make are changing welding lives, know that. Thank you!
You never cease to amaze! I have been following you for over a decade and using your videos to teach thousands of future welders. Your knowledge and videography skills are endless. Keep up the good work and have a happy new year.
Been in the field for only two years, I have so much to learn but I watch every video from you Jody!! My teacher has even showed us your videos in class two years ago. Thank you for all of the information you have shared!! Arcs and sparks my guy!!
Jody has pretty much taken my skill level from garage hack to professional lead. Now I'm explaining this stuff to guys who have been through 3 years of school. Thanks Bro!
I struggled with cracked tungsten on ac for far too long and finally found that snapping the tungsten was the problem about 6 months ago. So much time, effort and tungsten waisted. Glad to see a seasoned professional finally say that in public this video will help many people shorten their learning curve.
At work for our TIG robots and hand welders (part rework, die rebuilding, etc.) we use Piranha III sharpeners. For robot work it's a must (since things need to be repeatable) and for the rework welders it's convenience (since the welding lines they're on are often have TIG robots). For the die work, probably convenience again (and since we have so many of them company wide, spares aren't hard to obtain).
I'm a welding hobbyest. I purchased a $130 diamond wheel to put on my bench grinder and with a drill to spin it, it works great. I am guilty of "snapping" my electrodes BUT unlike your video demo, I butt the vice grips and lineman's pliers flush up against each other and have rarely had an issue. Because I'm not a pro, I inspect every ground electrode with a jewelers loupe to check for cracks or imperfections.
Typical Jody video, straight to the point, loaded with facts and the only filler is fused into the weld. BTW, recently received my stubby gas lens kit. I never realized it cuts your torch length nearly in half, I should have ordered one sooner! Thank you sir for making those kits and everything else you do for the community.
you're the man. i've been watching your vids for a few years and now im an apprentice in a sheetmetal shop that does some custom fab work and lots of heavy gauge stainless work... now i get to apply it and show off all tips i've learned from you - it makes me look really good. i know some really specific in depth info but still have no idea about some fundamentals - theres still no alternative to an in person mentor, school or on the job training. still have to put the time in for actual mastery.
Another Top Tip by Jody! When I started in the '80s, people would try to describe what you should see and it was pretty much trying to describe a rainbow to a blind man! Thanks to technology and Jody, I can see!! Thanks mate!! (Australia here!)
After all these years I'm still learning all the time. Never had it explained, or shown by example like you do ! I Just learned from the experienced guys that its just how its done and the proof is in the pudding !!! Thanks so much !!! Now I know through visualization why I was taught the different grind angles, not just the quality of the finished job.
Thanks for another informative video.👍 I always carried a wooden handled “pin vise” to hold the tungsten while sharpening. A pin vise is basically a thin handle attached to a small drill chuck. It keeps your hands from getting too close to the grinding surface when grinding shorter pieces of tungsten. Later I found that a small cordless drill worked even better. Having worked nukes on and off, an observant weld inspector decided to sample the dust from around the tungsten grinding machine and had the lab test it for radioactive contamination. The results were surprising. Apparently from years of sharpening 2% thoriated tungsten, there was an amble amount of contaminated dust to call for a thorough review of the tungsten the plant would switch to. Soon afterwards other types of tungsten were being used and 2% thorium was removed from service. Just passing that tid-bit of information along. 👍🇺🇸👍
I am so pleased I have seen this video - I thought it was my welder but that wobbly arc is exactly what I get and I know several of my electrodes have been split. I bet they always are but too fine to see. I will prepare properly next time!
I am relatively new to TIG ,but i gathered allot of experience in 16-20 months since is started to TIG (18+years of stick weld helped allot),outta my shop,i grind my tungsten using a fine grit grind wheel or even a very used up cutting wheel on a grinder,and i hold the tungsten in a drill,spinning on the flat side of the wheel with almost no downward pressure to roughly angled tip,works fine to me,just a drill and a grinder and i'm good to go,i never throw the tungsten back to the torch without cleaning the oxide with a scothbrite while the rod still in the drill at max rpm,i ensure a nice contact with the collar,and i prolong the life of that collar (tungsten holder). I always have a great time watching|listen your vids,best regards from Romania
I have been snapping my 2% Thoriated, and i have noticed the arc acting strange on start up once in awhile, it does split odd some times, i grind them on a bench grinder with a fine stone the long way around 40 degrees, i'm currently welding 20 gage CR patches on a 27 model-T, thanks for your videos.
I have had my tungsten split before and I chased that for quite a while before it fingernailed a piece of. I have sharpened a lot of electrodes with a 60 or 80 grit sanding pad on a grinder; just keep the scratches running vertically.
I'm just a hobby wrlder. I use the Primeweld 225, I use the belt sander/drill method to sharpen my tungsten. This was very helpful in knowing what type of tip to use for each type of weld and material. Also, I now will switch to a finer grit belt to sharpen my electrodes.
Hey, Jodi, can you do a video on cleaning a welding hood lens and some tips on keeping the fog down. Preferably some links to products that you use that are safe for the lenses. Thank you.
thank you for detailed video an distribution , so nice not to hear any crappy music ,. yours is by far very thought out an enjoyed , I learned much even at 67 yrs
Another great video. I have concerns about tungsten dust accumulation in the shop from grinding tips. I'm still learning wire feed and maintaining a short arc, so yeah I dip too often, and have to grind tungsten often. I wear a dust respirator while grinding but the fine dust accumulates. Should I be doing my grinding outside in the freezing cold to avoid the dust? Are there health effects to worry about?
Not as far as I know, except if you're using thoriated tungsten. If grinding thoriated tungsten, at least angle things so the dust is aimed away from you. Probably worth it to put on a dust mask for that also. Some say that the risk of grinding thoriated (which is slightly radioactive) is only theoretical, but I think it makes sense to take an extra safety step or two.
And for good shield gas coverage, especially on carbon steel, use a gas lens with a nice big N.8 ceramic. And we found that removing the mesh layers from the gas lens also helps to reduce porosity problems when welding carbon steel in windy conditions on site. (Found this out by accident, having climbed to the top of a column only to find that the gas lens mesh on the TIG set was covered in rusty spatter, so removed the mesh to avoid climbing up and down a 100' ladder and a walk to the stores.)
you need an out let over here in Australia in the northern part there of thanks for all the tips , tricks through out the year keep them coming as i watch them all cheers from Aus
Is that upper halo on the sharp tip dependent of the gas flow rate? It would be interesting to see the effect of flow rate with regards to grind angle for arc control, especially for those sharp grinds.
For breaking Tungsten in the field I would use two vice grips. Get snug grip and break one vice grip next to another. That typically prevented splintering. I currently fusion weld sanitary pipe. Use 30-40 amps, and a 1/16 tungsten electrode. I use the exact tungsten sharpener at 40°. I use 40° because I can't fulcontrol the gap and need to agitate both sides of the puddle to come together. My machine's pulses don't seem to help here.
So, I have to say ive been using vise-grips and a heavy object like an adjustable wrench to break tungsten successfully for a long time. the vise grips needs to be tight otherwise it may split but works great for all sizes
The halo around that spire point looks curious. You can see the a few things that are telling, primarily it is the color of the gas when Superheated. Basically, it's telling you that's your radiating your current off of the filament thin tungsten and the penetration is what your training for the pretty halo because you don't have the total current because it cannot deliver it before it's consumed by the incredibly this tungsten... Much like a like bulb filament. I do love these video and every one in a while, I notice something that I've learned in engineering as well as the one off lesson in chemistry from so long ago!
The tungsten mate style sharpeners that attach to a dremel or dremel tool copy work quite well and cost a fraction of what the dedicated tungsten sharpeners do.
chem dip (sodium nitrate) is also cheap and effective. but we're here to watch an informative advertisement - not find the most cost effective solution 😉
I’ve been using the little arbor you can get for a dremmel with a diamond wheel. It doesn’t catch dust but it works ok for small amounts of sharpening. I would love to get a dedicated sharpener one day !
Hey Jody, I need to do a despair on an old cast iron skillet. Just a small crack. Can you recommend a good filler rod that would hold up well to the constant heat cycles
I use a continuous rim diamond blade used for tile cutting on my dedicated angle grinder. I also added a diamond blade to sharpen it on that same blade. I found/saw the micro-cracks in my tungsten which prompted me to build it.
The R² law... forces drop off by the radius squared (F÷R²) this includes the electromagnetic force... this is why standoff distance is so important... also grinding a needle like point, on higher amps your point doesn't have enough material to carry the current so some of the arc wanders upward on the Tungsten, now not only did you spread out the point like arc from the Tungsten but you've also made the standoff Distance larger thus increasing R²... but like he said, lower amps its not a big deal so long as you have enough material to carry the current
It happened to me with some new blue electrodes, it snaped right off in half all the way, lenghtwise, just by grinding them...they where some chinese made but not very cheap. I bought from other store, made in Europe and didn't split no more, better quality. Can I buy from weldmonger with delivering to Europe? And how much will be the shipping tax for parts less than 5 kg? Thank you.
Jody, Im not sure how long I have been welding, there is some speculation that what Im doing cant really be called welding??? Im actually a "hack" welder. The important thing is that by watching your videos I am a much better "hack" welder than I would be otherwise!!!! I hope to start building a 22 foot aluminum boat this summer or fall. Ill be investing in a good pulse mig welder. I searched but I cant find a video where you review or instruct on this??? I think a video demonstrating pulse mig on .125, .187, .250 in different combinations plus horizontally and vertically would benefit us out here. (OK, maybe me more than others) Thanks for all your work on producing the videos.
Welded titanium for 35 years and we always snapped our tungsten., NEVER had a split. Maybe it was because we only used 2% thoriated, maybe it's different with ceriated. We also sharpened our tungsten on a belt grinder with 60 grit course and 150 grit fine.
Great info Jodie I’m very impressed by your knowledge and confidence and consistency I as well have adapted this tungsten cutting method just by chance some time last year when I found harbor freight was selling those diamond grind wheels so initially I wasn’t cutting them with a diamond wheel and then I tried it one day just by chance, and I found out that it was much more faster efficient and it put 10 times less heat into the tungsten than any other method that I tried as well as even trying the chemdip learning that the diamond wheel and just grinding them so much until you can break them by hand that it was much more efficient and faster method Thanks for all the tips and keep the good videos coming.
How do you hold the short electrode like for CK MR140 torch head? Do i need a special sharpener for it? Looks to be shorter than the gap in the sharpener. I have CK17 and CK18 torches; looking to add CK MR140 to the mix.
I get those maroon Scotchbrite wheels they sell as "paint strippers" at Wallyworld, and chuck one in the drill press at high speed. Grind the point on an 80-grit bench grinder....using a drill, since those electrodes get hot as a $10 pistol......then turn around and polish it on the Scotchbrite. It takes out ALL the grinding marks.
6" or 8" diamond flat lapidary wheel mounted outboard of a grinding wheel. Cheap, fast, and way better grind quality than that little wheel in the dedicated grinder. available on ebay and amazon. you can even stack different diameter wheels for course and fine .
Hi...I am complete beginner and purchased very cheap machine which can operate in MMA,MIG and TIG on carbon steel or stainlesssteal...not aluminum... I also bought blue tungsten electrodes and tried with it to weld aluminum anyways...I hot a spark 🤣 bug the electrode melted almost immediately even on very low Amp ... I didn't try other metal with it,but generally...if the electrodes will continue to melt like that , they most likely shity quality right? Or it was connected to my aluminum welding research?
@weldingtipsandtricks .... aaaaha...thank you for so fast reply...I had ground on - and torch on + ... gas is 86 % argon ,which I found out just now that on aluminum must be 100%...
I am also a pipewelder for almost 30 years, but this is the first time I have seen such a good teacher like you. I think you are the best on RUclips, thank you from Greece.
Agree! Jody is an excellent teacher, and I like his style/commentary/ editing
Your a pipe welder. You guys are still using ancient technology for burning rods
1 test is better then 100 opinions. Best advice I've heard in years.
Haha sure when a test made by ppl like Jody, if a random test was made by a chinchilla and 100 Jodys was having opinions would you argue or relay on the test ?
@@lilkurd2000 Depends on how many Weld certs and experience the Chinchilla has.
Everyone's a welder until they take a test is what I say
but- isnt that saying, just an opinion? lets get some opinions on this
I've been welding going on 24 years now... I learned most of what I know from the older welders who weren't afraid to teach as "that is just how you do it"... and so.. it's how I did it and never really knew WHY... so to have the explanations given with such clarity is great and I can pass that info on to the newer guys that I teach tricks to occasionally. Thanks for preserving so much of our trade skill knowledge base and putting it in such an easy to understand format. I routinely suggest this channel to anyone who wants to weld or get better with their current skill set.
Videos like this one are the reason this is the best welding channel online. Detailed shots that show the effects of micro cracks of a poorly trimmed tungsten! Well done Jody, and on Christmas! This man never rests. Merry Christmas big guy, hope 2023 is your best year yet!
Thanks very much
I've been hobby welding for 10 years and this is the best demonstration I've ever seen of how to sharpen your tungsten and why. Thanks
I’m a pipe welder in a shipyard. I use my angle grinder + diamond cutting disc to sharpen my tungsten. I drilled a hole in my grinder guard at an angle and use a drill to hold the tungsten. Comes out perfect every time.
That’s awesome
“One test is worth more than a hundred opinions”. Priceless. You have a brand new subscriber.
Thanks for this.
I went from novice mig welder with some experience with TIG, to food service.
My industrial welding experience served me well over the years, but failed me on thin wall stainless in the food industry.
I agree whole heartedly with the 30 year vet. Before i broke out welding. Although i was in welding school, you were my teacher. Very informative, and great visuals. Some of the best arc shots and explanations on the internet. Thank you for your videos, Jody.
By far, the BEST, TIG tips and tricks and advice on RUclips! Hands down. I am a learning novice, and I TRUST you. The videos you make are changing welding lives, know that. Thank you!
Wow, thanks!
You never cease to amaze! I have been following you for over a decade and using your videos to teach thousands of future welders. Your knowledge and videography skills are endless. Keep up the good work and have a happy new year.
Wow, thank you!
Been in the field for only two years, I have so much to learn but I watch every video from you Jody!! My teacher has even showed us your videos in class two years ago. Thank you for all of the information you have shared!! Arcs and sparks my guy!!
Jody has pretty much taken my skill level from garage hack to professional lead. Now I'm explaining this stuff to guys who have been through 3 years of school. Thanks Bro!
i am a retired welder of 40 years so glad to see someone that can teach so well thank you sir
I struggled with cracked tungsten on ac for far too long and finally found that snapping the tungsten was the problem about 6 months ago. So much time, effort and tungsten waisted.
Glad to see a seasoned professional finally say that in public this video will help many people shorten their learning curve.
At work for our TIG robots and hand welders (part rework, die rebuilding, etc.) we use Piranha III sharpeners. For robot work it's a must (since things need to be repeatable) and for the rework welders it's convenience (since the welding lines they're on are often have TIG robots). For the die work, probably convenience again (and since we have so many of them company wide, spares aren't hard to obtain).
I'm a welding hobbyest. I purchased a $130 diamond wheel to put on my bench grinder and with a drill to spin it, it works great. I am guilty of "snapping" my electrodes BUT unlike your video demo, I butt the vice grips and lineman's pliers flush up against each other and have rarely had an issue. Because I'm not a pro, I inspect every ground electrode with a jewelers loupe to check for cracks or imperfections.
Thanks Jody. Very informative. Have yourselves a great Christmas
Typical Jody video, straight to the point, loaded with facts and the only filler is fused into the weld.
BTW, recently received my stubby gas lens kit. I never realized it cuts your torch length nearly in half, I should have ordered one sooner! Thank you sir for making those kits and everything else you do for the community.
you're the man. i've been watching your vids for a few years and now im an apprentice in a sheetmetal shop that does some custom fab work and lots of heavy gauge stainless work... now i get to apply it and show off all tips i've learned from you - it makes me look really good. i know some really specific in depth info but still have no idea about some fundamentals - theres still no alternative to an in person mentor, school or on the job training. still have to put the time in for actual mastery.
Another Top Tip by Jody!
When I started in the '80s, people would try to describe what you should see and it was pretty much trying to describe a rainbow to a blind man!
Thanks to technology and Jody, I can see!! Thanks mate!! (Australia here!)
After all these years I'm still learning all the time. Never had it explained, or shown by example like you do !
I Just learned from the experienced guys that its just how its done and the proof is in the pudding !!!
Thanks so much !!! Now I know through visualization why I was taught the different grind angles, not just the quality of the finished job.
This was incredibly eye opening. I’m watching this on my lunch break at work. I’ll be sharpening tungsten differently from now on. Thank you!
i love the knowledge you give with your tests and the knowledge you have on hand is the best i’ve seen on youtube
Thanks for another informative video.👍 I always carried a wooden handled “pin vise” to hold the tungsten while sharpening. A pin vise is basically a thin handle attached to a small drill chuck. It keeps your hands from getting too close to the grinding surface when grinding shorter pieces of tungsten. Later I found that a small cordless drill worked even better.
Having worked nukes on and off, an observant weld inspector decided to sample the dust from around the tungsten grinding machine and had the lab test it for radioactive contamination. The results were surprising. Apparently from years of sharpening 2% thoriated tungsten, there was an amble amount of contaminated dust to call for a thorough review of the tungsten the plant would switch to. Soon afterwards other types of tungsten were being used and 2% thorium was removed from service. Just passing that tid-bit of information along. 👍🇺🇸👍
I am so pleased I have seen this video - I thought it was my welder but that wobbly arc is exactly what I get and I know several of my electrodes have been split. I bet they always are but too fine to see. I will prepare properly next time!
That's really helpful, thank you!
There are just so many variables for a newbie, this was so clear it's removed a few of them!
I am relatively new to TIG ,but i gathered allot of experience in 16-20 months since is started to TIG (18+years of stick weld helped allot),outta my shop,i grind my tungsten using a fine grit grind wheel or even a very used up cutting wheel on a grinder,and i hold the tungsten in a drill,spinning on the flat side of the wheel with almost no downward pressure to roughly angled tip,works fine to me,just a drill and a grinder and i'm good to go,i never throw the tungsten back to the torch without cleaning the oxide with a scothbrite while the rod still in the drill at max rpm,i ensure a nice contact with the collar,and i prolong the life of that collar (tungsten holder). I always have a great time watching|listen your vids,best regards from Romania
I’m a rank beginner, and found this video enlightening. I need to go back and watch more of your vids, I’ve missed a bunch.
Very informative Jody! Thanks! Hope to see you at FabTech!
I have been snapping my 2% Thoriated, and i have noticed the arc acting strange on start up once in awhile, it does split odd some times, i grind them on a bench grinder with a fine stone the long way around 40 degrees, i'm currently welding 20 gage CR patches on a 27 model-T, thanks for your videos.
I have had my tungsten split before and I chased that for quite a while before it fingernailed a piece of. I have sharpened a lot of electrodes with a 60 or 80 grit sanding pad on a grinder; just keep the scratches running vertically.
I'm just a hobby wrlder. I use the Primeweld 225, I use the belt sander/drill method to sharpen my tungsten. This was very helpful in knowing what type of tip to use for each type of weld and material. Also, I now will switch to a finer grit belt to sharpen my electrodes.
Hey, Jodi, can you do a video on cleaning a welding hood lens and some tips on keeping the fog down. Preferably some links to products that you use that are safe for the lenses. Thank you.
thank you for detailed video an distribution , so nice not to hear any crappy music ,. yours is by far very thought out an enjoyed , I learned much even at 67 yrs
Another great video. I have concerns about tungsten dust accumulation in the shop from grinding tips. I'm still learning wire feed and maintaining a short arc, so yeah I dip too often, and have to grind tungsten often. I wear a dust respirator while grinding but the fine dust accumulates. Should I be doing my grinding outside in the freezing cold to avoid the dust? Are there health effects to worry about?
Not as far as I know, except if you're using thoriated tungsten. If grinding thoriated tungsten, at least angle things so the dust is aimed away from you. Probably worth it to put on a dust mask for that also. Some say that the risk of grinding thoriated (which is slightly radioactive) is only theoretical, but I think it makes sense to take an extra safety step or two.
Your videos are so good. U really explain everything into detail.
Merry Christmas, Jody! Thanks for all you have given to our community!
Merry Christmas
Love your methodical approach to things people repeat over and over, but seeing is believing.
And for good shield gas coverage, especially on carbon steel, use a gas lens with a nice big N.8 ceramic. And we found that removing the mesh layers from the gas lens also helps to reduce porosity problems when welding carbon steel in windy conditions on site. (Found this out by accident, having climbed to the top of a column only to find that the gas lens mesh on the TIG set was covered in rusty spatter, so removed the mesh to avoid climbing up and down a 100' ladder and a walk to the stores.)
YOU ARE TRULY A WEALTH OF KNOWLEDGE, THANK YOU VERY MUCH.
you need an out let over here in Australia in the northern part there of thanks for all the tips , tricks through out the year keep them coming as i watch them all cheers from Aus
Should do a video on aluminum overhead mig. Vee grooves. What's the best advice for aluminum overhead mig push , push pull gun spray?
Very good video I have been wondering what difference would make thanks
Is that upper halo on the sharp tip dependent of the gas flow rate? It would be interesting to see the effect of flow rate with regards to grind angle for arc control, especially for those sharp grinds.
For breaking Tungsten in the field I would use two vice grips. Get snug grip and break one vice grip next to another. That typically prevented splintering.
I currently fusion weld sanitary pipe. Use 30-40 amps, and a 1/16 tungsten electrode. I use the exact tungsten sharpener at 40°.
I use 40° because I can't fulcontrol the gap and need to agitate both sides of the puddle to come together. My machine's pulses don't seem to help here.
So, I have to say ive been using vise-grips and a heavy object like an adjustable wrench to break tungsten successfully for a long time. the vise grips needs to be tight otherwise it may split but works great for all sizes
Under 9 minutes and I learned something, not bad.
Nice job Jody! Excellent information as always.
Merry Christmas Jodie thanks for your videos over the years
John👍
The halo around that spire point looks curious. You can see the a few things that are telling, primarily it is the color of the gas when Superheated. Basically, it's telling you that's your radiating your current off of the filament thin tungsten and the penetration is what your training for the pretty halo because you don't have the total current because it cannot deliver it before it's consumed by the incredibly this tungsten... Much like a like bulb filament.
I do love these video and every one in a while, I notice something that I've learned in engineering as well as the one off lesson in chemistry from so long ago!
The tungsten mate style sharpeners that attach to a dremel or dremel tool copy work quite well and cost a fraction of what the dedicated tungsten sharpeners do.
chem dip (sodium nitrate) is also cheap and effective. but we're here to watch an informative advertisement - not find the most cost effective solution 😉
I’ve been using the little arbor you can get for a dremmel with a diamond wheel. It doesn’t catch dust but it works ok for small amounts of sharpening. I would love to get a dedicated sharpener one day !
best tig video ever..thanks for this new knowledge
great lesson. tig finger still working great, thanks
Love this channel. Have a Joyous New Year!
Love your videos and I don't even tig weld!! Happy to see you alive and well, wishing you many happy years more!
Fantastic video, excellent proof and data.
Thanks Jody, Merry Christmas bud!
Hey Jody, I need to do a despair on an old cast iron skillet. Just a small crack. Can you recommend a good filler rod that would hold up well to the constant heat cycles
Sometimes it's nice to do a review of some fundamental basics
I'm not a welder, never even done it once. But I still fuckin' subbed. Cause I learned something.
Clearly a great teacher.
Is using a cutting torch a good way to sharpen tungstens? Been doing it that way for years.
Nonchalantly TIG welds 2 razor edges together without burning through! 👏👏👏👏👏 I can even see the dimes on the razor edge.
Merry Christmas, Jody! Thanks for the video!
Thanks for sharing with us Jody. Great information. Fred.
excellent visuals, great presentation highly informative .. good job !!
I use a continuous rim diamond blade used for tile cutting on my dedicated angle grinder. I also added a diamond blade to sharpen it on that same blade. I found/saw the micro-cracks in my tungsten which prompted me to build it.
Thanks as always, Jody! You are the man!
I use a cordless drill and a soft back grinding pad works perfectly. Good video buy the way.
great video, hope you had a great christmas
Thanks for the great video as usual Jody, and Merry Christmas
This is a GREAT video! As a learning bike frame builder, it really helps me decide on a taper to the tungsten for .035" tubing! 🤠❤⚒🔥
I snap off bad tip on sharp table edge hitting with heavy file. I don't do ac welding often. Now I know when ac will fail
The R² law... forces drop off by the radius squared (F÷R²) this includes the electromagnetic force... this is why standoff distance is so important... also grinding a needle like point, on higher amps your point doesn't have enough material to carry the current so some of the arc wanders upward on the Tungsten, now not only did you spread out the point like arc from the Tungsten but you've also made the standoff Distance larger thus increasing R²... but like he said, lower amps its not a big deal so long as you have enough material to carry the current
Love the testing!
Another very informative video. Thank you Jody and Merry Christmas!
I've been grinding the electrode too steep. Thanks, Jody!
It happened to me with some new blue electrodes, it snaped right off in half all the way, lenghtwise, just by grinding them...they where some chinese made but not very cheap. I bought from other store, made in Europe and didn't split no more, better quality. Can I buy from weldmonger with delivering to Europe? And how much will be the shipping tax for parts less than 5 kg? Thank you.
Jody, Im not sure how long I have been welding, there is some speculation that what Im doing cant really be called welding??? Im actually a "hack" welder. The important thing is that by watching your videos I am a much better "hack" welder than I would be otherwise!!!! I hope to start building a 22 foot aluminum boat this summer or fall. Ill be investing in a good pulse mig welder. I searched but I cant find a video where you review or instruct on this??? I think a video demonstrating pulse mig on .125, .187, .250 in different combinations plus horizontally and vertically would benefit us out here. (OK, maybe me more than others) Thanks for all your work on producing the videos.
Merry Christmas brother jody.
Welded titanium for 35 years and we always snapped our tungsten., NEVER had a split. Maybe it was because we only used 2% thoriated, maybe it's different with ceriated.
We also sharpened our tungsten on a belt grinder with 60 grit course and 150 grit fine.
Great info Jodie I’m very impressed by your knowledge and confidence and consistency I as well have adapted this tungsten cutting method just by chance some time last year when I found harbor freight was selling those diamond grind wheels so initially I wasn’t cutting them with a diamond wheel and then I tried it one day just by chance, and I found out that it was much more faster efficient and it put 10 times less heat into the tungsten than any other method that I tried as well as even trying the chemdip learning that the diamond wheel and just grinding them so much until you can break them by hand that it was much more efficient and faster method Thanks for all the tips and keep the good videos coming.
Great video sir thanks for your time
How do you hold the short electrode like for CK MR140 torch head? Do i need a special sharpener for it? Looks to be shorter than the gap in the sharpener. I have CK17 and CK18 torches; looking to add CK MR140 to the mix.
So helpful thank you for posting
I get those maroon Scotchbrite wheels they sell as "paint strippers" at Wallyworld, and chuck one in the drill press at high speed. Grind the point on an 80-grit bench grinder....using a drill, since those electrodes get hot as a $10 pistol......then turn around and polish it on the Scotchbrite. It takes out ALL the grinding marks.
Merry Christmas to you, your family and everyone at WTaT
I have a 255 Lincoln Square Way I live in Southwestern Montana. I wonder how I find somebody to work on that machine guardian take mode
Gracias por tan valiosa información.
Lo mejor para el 2023.
Thank you for this! Very helpful!
This video is gold thank you very much I have had my tungsten crack but could not see it
Merry Christmas Jody, wishing you and your family a wonderful holiday season. 👍
which brand tig welder?
6" or 8" diamond flat lapidary wheel mounted outboard of a grinding wheel. Cheap, fast, and way better grind quality than that little wheel in the dedicated grinder. available on ebay and amazon. you can even stack different diameter wheels for course and fine .
Hi...I am complete beginner and purchased very cheap machine which can operate in MMA,MIG and TIG on carbon steel or stainlesssteal...not aluminum... I also bought blue tungsten electrodes and tried with it to weld aluminum anyways...I hot a spark 🤣 bug the electrode melted almost immediately even on very low Amp ... I didn't try other metal with it,but generally...if the electrodes will continue to melt like that , they most likely shity quality right? Or it was connected to my aluminum welding research?
Most likely wrong polarity, torch plugged in to wrong plug, or wrong gas
@weldingtipsandtricks .... aaaaha...thank you for so fast reply...I had ground on - and torch on + ... gas is 86 % argon ,which I found out just now that on aluminum must be 100%...
Great tips, thanks Jody!
can also use sodium nitrate
i always snap my tungsten by hand when i need to shorten a piece down and i have never had one fail on me while welding.
excellent video