Thanks Jody! Today marks 4 years since I first plugged a TIG welder into the wall and started learning to weld with all your videos. Today I'm building a backpurged stainless turbo manifold for a show Camaro. We appreciate all the time you've put into helping people like me learn how to weld with absolutely zero experience 💯
Jody is the man....an inspiration and pool of knowledge to all who watch him......I have been a viewer since at least 2010.....and the products he sells are also great.......this may sound like a paid testimonial, but I am speaking from 13 years experience of purchasing my first TigFinger before anyone else was marketing them and it was the only thing in his store ........I have never been disappointed.....cheers from Orlando, Paul
Still the most informative welding videos on the web. I show your videos to my son as I attempt to teach him. BTW, TIG finger has saved me from a lot of burns!
Thanks Jody for the great instructions in your video, it's easier seeing what you are actually doing and helps in trying to get coordinated to feed the filler rod. Stay safe and keep up the great videos. Fred.
Jody, your videos have had a profound impact on my welding career. I started watching your videos about 7 and a half years ago when I was in welding school. I binge watched everything you had and graduated at the top of my class, now years later I’m running my own welding business full time and it is going extremely well. It was always my dream to do so! And without your videos I know I wouldn’t have the success I have now. So just want to say thanks and I still enjoy watching your videos, I always learn something new!
Very much food for thought. I am old and have rheumatoid arthritis, so my TIG days are long behind me, but I really enjoy your thinking and examples here. Yours is the only welding channel I still watch, and I always enjoy it.
A lot of my welding is on small thin cross section materials using .032 filler and it goes so fast I forget/don't have time to advance the filler so I use the method of holding the filler out long. The parts are small so I rarely run out of the stickout before I have to stop and reposition.
Started watching your videos a long time ago. Always enjoyed welding. Fast forward many years and I just attended a local foundations of welding class and then their intermediate GTAW class for a cert or two. Passed the carbon steel and stainless steel, failed my two attempts at aluminum. I and other students would watch your tips during lunch if we were having a tough time. You rock!!
Been welding for too long😂😂...and got the old man's hands and eyes...and I've just got back into alloys for myself jobs, ...and you vids are just full of very useful stuff, even for us old blokes..👍👍
I have stiff fingers and butt weld mostly thin aluminum and often times in very uncomfortable positions and sometimes very cramped places so I use all the time the solution you give for arthritis because I can weld only 2 to 5 seconds before having to reposition myself. I have to cut the filler rod in half because otherwise it tends to weld the other extremity with the part when it makes contact, yes I'm literally inside the part I'm welding sometimes.
Lol this is the worst. Then if your like me you give it a good tug like you would a stuck stick electrode, and jam the filler right into your nice clean and hot tungsten and have to shut down
@@fuzznut25 😆 yeah that happened that's why I cut the filler rod in half still happens sometimes. The worst is when I have to stick my head with the hood and a arm in a tight place and don't have the room for the other arm and have to find an opening not too far for my other arm to reach just to pass the filler rod through the opening to reach where I'm welding. Can't see the puddle, can't see where the filler rod is exactly plus it's hanging sometimes more than a foot. Not dipping the electrode not touching it with the rod and not having the rod to stick anywhere is very difficult, I envy those who sit at a workbench weldind heavy gauge.
Geez! Clear cup! Just started a welding course 4 weeks ago, couple weeks on acetlyne, beads, laps, T's, and butt joints. I started TIG last week, workin on lap now, all of it only on steel so far. Even with my tint turned all the way down it can be really hard to see that puddle sometimes! Have to wonder if a clear cup would make that easier now! Also just got a some new prescription glasses so getting use to those too now. 🙄
Great video as always. I was hoping to see you weld with your opposite hand. Ponder this idea. We all know that the shielding gas is there, just as we know oxygen is in the air. Wouldn't it be cool to be able to put some kind of dye into the shielding gas so as to see the how it surrounds the welding surface? Just a thought.
Having to laugh at this video Jody..., I have been trying for years to feed filler the way you demonstrated back in the day, and have never been very good...seeing the truth come out, makes me have to go back to the drawing board and learn a new way.....thanks for the technique ......your fan here in Orlando, Paul
I don't like regular tig gloves made of smooth skin, because the welding rod slips a little. But after you use these gloves for a couple of days - they become softer and you get that extra bit of traction so much needed to feed the rod with precision. I wish I could try deerskin gloves someday, I feel they could make feeding way easier
Thank you! I only buy my weld consumables and materials from you to support these videos. I’m 100% taught by people like you and “the fabrication series” channel. I know no one who tig welds aluminum so even if I wanted advice I couldn’t get it. I do know plenty of boilermakers/pipefitters who have helped me on carbon and stainless some. It’s funny to ask them about aluminum and most never even attempted and think it’s very difficult. Most never have used a pedal. I honestly think steel is tougher for me just because I’ve done so much aluminum welding. I rebuilt a boat and have done plenty of other projects on pontoons, aluminum box trucks, trailers, dirtbike parts etc. I’d like to start a small side welder shop one of these days. Anyways thank you!
My feed hand is still recovering from breakage. I got my primeweld from you while it was still casted. I thought i was being lazy feeding from way back without trying to finger feed. Lol. I need to start working it by carrying around a piece of filler rod and getting use to it.
It's not so much the actual feeding out of the rod that I find tricky, but keeping the end steady while you're doing it - tends to waggle all over the place!
In the beginning of my welding career, I used a "pen" that had a wheel in the side. You feed your wire through the "pen", and use the wheel to feed it.
Will you start showing how you prop and get comfortable, best ways the hold torch, best ways to move along a joint, best ways to use tig finger. But please show more of how you prop your hands and body when you tig weld
Good video Jody! I'm having little problem with fcaw welding vertical position with strick tack welds, don't know how to melt them good, can you maybe do a video about that?
I had to use one for a period of time when my carpal tunnel was bad before I had surgery. It has its limitations and really screwed me up when I went back to the normal way.
I’m planning welding 304 stainless tube 1.5mm wall thickness for motorcycle exhaust. I was planning on using 308rod but how can I stop contamination forming on the back of the weld without purging?? Can you advise would be really appreciated! Love the channel
Hello, just ran across your channel yesterday and watched the vid you made on gasless flux core for beginners. I baught a HF $100.00 wire feed and I'm having the same problem with the spatter. The thing is it doesn't look anything inside like you showed as far as the wiring. I'm new at this so besides telling me to get a better unit is there anything I could change? Thank you
Hey Jody. I just learned Sub-Arc and I'm about to start practicing TIG at home. Could I use Sub-Arc wire for TIG rod on mild steel? I seen the video where you mentioned braiding .035 hard wire, and Sub-Arc looks similar, but that doesn't mean much, I suppose.
Thanks Jody. I have a gopro and would like to film myself, do I need a filter in front of the camera to keep from hurting my camera? If I just use a dark lens then it is dark before I start welding? What should the setup look like?
Hi sir, I'm your follower from Indonesia, here welding often uses LB52 or E7016 welding wire from root to cap, please give me tips for working on the 5G position. Thank you sir.
Hey Jody, serious question- how complicated is TIG really? I MIG welded once when I was 18, didnt seem too difficult (ugly welds for first time with no instruction but they held) I'm 38 now and looking to start welding as a hobbyist/homestead situation. Make a chicken feeder, funnels, welding small pipe joints, stiff like that. Gonna have to be self taught, no welding classes in the area and even if there were, my job in the military wouldnt afford me much time to attend classes. My hand/eye coordination and patience, Id say, is excellent. I have been flying H-60 Blackhawk helicopters for almost a decade on the medevac platform and one of the things I teach new pilots to do is balance that 18,000 lb aircraft on one wheel on a cliff. Or hovering 100 feet up while hoisting our medic. Im not saying all this to brag, all the videos, books and articles I have been reading the past two years talk about how complicated TIG is like you have to have attained Jedi status to even attempt it. And I am ready to drop some money right now on either MIG or TIG to start practicing to finally make all these projects Ive held off for years. I really want TIG because everything I have read and watched praises how versatile it is but again, Jedi status.... I know that was lengthy and not fully expecting a response from you but if you do read this, any feedback would be greatly appreciated.
I can feed filler rod with the best as long as I'm not doing anything else. But add the foot pedal and the torch and suddenly, my ability to feed the rod is gone. One too many things for my brain I guess.
Jody hello, I very like your videos, your videos are one of the best. I try to support your work through your WeldMonger store. On November 13th I made an order, today is December 14th, I still didn’t receive it. I understand maybe you are not aware of it. I think your team could do better work. Thank you for videos.
As a welder, I've always felt like a dummy for not knowing how to solder copper. Some welders actually tig copper. Is this practical, or a waste of gas?
I tig brazed my hvac condenser lines because my o2 regulator diaphragm popped in the middle of it. Funny to roll the weld cart over to the side of the house and use a tig torch to silver braze but it worked awesome and hasn’t leaked in a year lol.
Geez Jodie, your videos are always so helpful but you failed to explain how you were feeding the rod in this one. I saw your thumb moving and your fingers staying still, I can’t replicate it?
Question: Where is PrimeWeld made at? Answer: Like any budget brand, Primeweld is made in China. AND EVERYONE should BE AWARE that they are no different than Apple having their iphones made in china or nike making air jordans there (because it's cheep to make and makes the companies more money as in China it's cheeper because they are using slave labor and no one , not even here , is saying a word about it. Why not?
Thanks Jody! Today marks 4 years since I first plugged a TIG welder into the wall and started learning to weld with all your videos. Today I'm building a backpurged stainless turbo manifold for a show Camaro. We appreciate all the time you've put into helping people like me learn how to weld with absolutely zero experience 💯
That is awesome!
Jody is the man....an inspiration and pool of knowledge to all who watch him......I have been a viewer
since at least 2010.....and the products he sells are also great.......this may sound like a paid testimonial,
but I am speaking from 13 years experience of purchasing my first TigFinger before anyone else was
marketing them and it was the only thing in his store ........I have never been disappointed.....cheers from Orlando,
Paul
Thanks for mentioning those of us with damaged hands. Many decades of manual labor takes a toll on the hands.
I don't even weld anymore but I'm still subscribed
Still the most informative welding videos on the web.
I show your videos to my son as I attempt to teach him.
BTW, TIG finger has saved me from a lot of burns!
thank you
Thanks Jody for the great instructions in your video, it's easier seeing what you are actually doing and helps in trying to get coordinated to feed the filler rod. Stay safe and keep up the great videos. Fred.
Glad it was helpful!
Jody, your videos have had a profound impact on my welding career. I started watching your videos about 7 and a half years ago when I was in welding school. I binge watched everything you had and graduated at the top of my class, now years later I’m running my own welding business full time and it is going extremely well. It was always my dream to do so! And without your videos I know I wouldn’t have the success I have now. So just want to say thanks and I still enjoy watching your videos, I always learn something new!
Thank you. Wish you the best
Very much food for thought. I am old and have rheumatoid arthritis, so my TIG days are long behind me, but I really enjoy your thinking and examples here. Yours is the only welding channel I still watch, and I always enjoy it.
A lot of my welding is on small thin cross section materials using .032 filler and it goes so fast I forget/don't have time to advance the filler so I use the method of holding the filler out long. The parts are small so I rarely run out of the stickout before I have to stop and reposition.
Never retire from YT Jodie
Jody's videos are worth gold. Even those old videos are true and applicable as they are today.
Thanks for the video. I really enjoy TIG welding but my arthritis makes feeding rod extremely difficult. Part II was very informative.
Started watching your videos a long time ago. Always enjoyed welding. Fast forward many years and I just attended a local foundations of welding class and then their intermediate GTAW class for a cert or two. Passed the carbon steel and stainless steel, failed my two attempts at aluminum. I and other students would watch your tips during lunch if we were having a tough time. You rock!!
Been welding for too long😂😂...and got the old man's hands and eyes...and I've just got back into alloys for myself jobs, ...and you vids are just full of very useful stuff, even for us old blokes..👍👍
Thanks for all the info throughout the years Jody! Not too long ago marked 10 years under the hood and just a few months ago I became an instructor!
Best videos out there. I’ve been watching for years and years and I’ve bought everything off your store. Thank you for sharing your knowledge
You should do a video on some sch 10 stainless pipe. From rooting to capping. Thanks.
I have stiff fingers and butt weld mostly thin aluminum and often times in very uncomfortable positions and sometimes very cramped places so I use all the time the solution you give for arthritis because I can weld only 2 to 5 seconds before having to reposition myself. I have to cut the filler rod in half because otherwise it tends to weld the other extremity with the part when it makes contact, yes I'm literally inside the part I'm welding sometimes.
Lol this is the worst. Then if your like me you give it a good tug like you would a stuck stick electrode, and jam the filler right into your nice clean and hot tungsten and have to shut down
@@fuzznut25 😆 yeah that happened that's why I cut the filler rod in half still happens sometimes.
The worst is when I have to stick my head with the hood and a arm in a tight place and don't have the room for the other arm and have to find an opening not too far for my other arm to reach just to pass the filler rod through the opening to reach where I'm welding. Can't see the puddle, can't see where the filler rod is exactly plus it's hanging sometimes more than a foot. Not dipping the electrode not touching it with the rod and not having the rod to stick anywhere is very difficult, I envy those who sit at a workbench weldind heavy gauge.
Always an educational video. Thanks Jody!!
Geez! Clear cup! Just started a welding course 4 weeks ago, couple weeks on acetlyne, beads, laps, T's, and butt joints. I started TIG last week, workin on lap now, all of it only on steel so far. Even with my tint turned all the way down it can be really hard to see that puddle sometimes! Have to wonder if a clear cup would make that easier now! Also just got a some new prescription glasses so getting use to those too now. 🙄
Great video as always. I was hoping to see you weld with your opposite hand. Ponder this idea. We all know that the shielding gas is there, just as we know oxygen is in the air. Wouldn't it be cool to be able to put some kind of dye into the shielding gas so as to see the how it surrounds the welding surface? Just a thought.
Having to laugh at this video Jody..., I have been trying for years to feed filler the way
you demonstrated back in the day, and have never been very good...seeing the truth come
out, makes me have to go back to the drawing board and learn a new way.....thanks for
the technique ......your fan here in Orlando, Paul
I don't like regular tig gloves made of smooth skin, because the welding rod slips a little. But after you use these gloves for a couple of days - they become softer and you get that extra bit of traction so much needed to feed the rod with precision. I wish I could try deerskin gloves someday, I feel they could make feeding way easier
Jody thank you for every video that you uploaded and please keep uploading.
Thanks for your tips, Jody. And for your online store.
Thank you! I only buy my weld consumables and materials from you to support these videos. I’m 100% taught by people like you and “the fabrication series” channel. I know no one who tig welds aluminum so even if I wanted advice I couldn’t get it. I do know plenty of boilermakers/pipefitters who have helped me on carbon and stainless some. It’s funny to ask them about aluminum and most never even attempted and think it’s very difficult. Most never have used a pedal.
I honestly think steel is tougher for me just because I’ve done so much aluminum welding. I rebuilt a boat and have done plenty of other projects on pontoons, aluminum box trucks, trailers, dirtbike parts etc. I’d like to start a small side welder shop one of these days.
Anyways thank you!
My feed hand is still recovering from breakage. I got my primeweld from you while it was still casted. I thought i was being lazy feeding from way back without trying to finger feed. Lol. I need to start working it by carrying around a piece of filler rod and getting use to it.
It's not so much the actual feeding out of the rod that I find tricky, but keeping the end steady while you're doing it - tends to waggle all over the place!
In the beginning of my welding career, I used a "pen" that had a wheel in the side. You feed your wire through the "pen", and use the wheel to feed it.
Good stuff as always Jody. I seriously need to practice this. Thanks!
Super vidéo très instructive (comme d'habitude)
Merci
Will you start showing how you prop and get comfortable, best ways the hold torch, best ways to move along a joint, best ways to use tig finger. But please show more of how you prop your hands and body when you tig weld
Awesome camera shot😯
Thank you Jody.
A wealth of great advice
Good video Jody! I'm having little problem with fcaw welding vertical position with strick tack welds, don't know how to melt them good, can you maybe do a video about that?
stick*
Thanks
Shove it in until u switch naturally into pencil feeding ... I'd really love to learn how to feed it king style tho
Sweet.
Another good viedo. Thank you Jody.
Thank you for tutorials welding
Do you only feed tig rod by hand or do you also use a tig rod feed tool like auto tig feed tool that they sell on eBay? Super handy tool
Wow watching from Burundi 🇧🇮 good Wark
Are you totally opposed to those rod feeding roller aids? I never knew they existed until a few days ago. What is your opinion of them?
I think they can be helpful for people who don't tig weld often or in the case of arthritis, injury, etc. I don't really care for them
I had to use one for a period of time when my carpal tunnel was bad before I had surgery. It has its limitations and really screwed me up when I went back to the normal way.
I tried one and found the wheel to small to use well.
It's a fantastic video, keep it up.
I’m planning welding 304 stainless tube 1.5mm wall thickness for motorcycle exhaust. I was planning on using 308rod but how can I stop contamination forming on the back of the weld without purging?? Can you advise would be really appreciated! Love the channel
Very informative
Hello, just ran across your channel yesterday and watched the vid you made on gasless flux core for beginners. I baught a HF $100.00 wire feed and I'm having the same problem with the spatter. The thing is it doesn't look anything inside like you showed as far as the wiring. I'm new at this so besides telling me to get a better unit is there anything I could change? Thank you
Hey Jody. I just learned Sub-Arc and I'm about to start practicing TIG at home. Could I use Sub-Arc wire for TIG rod on mild steel? I seen the video where you mentioned braiding .035 hard wire, and Sub-Arc looks similar, but that doesn't mean much, I suppose.
I have come to call intense focus " puddle vision"
Thanks Jody. I have a gopro and would like to film myself, do I need a filter in front of the camera to keep from hurting my camera? If I just use a dark lens then it is dark before I start welding? What should the setup look like?
Hi sir, I'm your follower from Indonesia, here welding often uses LB52 or E7016 welding wire from root to cap, please give me tips for working on the 5G position. Thank you sir.
Hi Jody. Just a quick question- with clamping the pipe with the jaws on the inside, don't they slacken the grip when the pipe warms up?
Hey Jody, serious question- how complicated is TIG really? I MIG welded once when I was 18, didnt seem too difficult (ugly welds for first time with no instruction but they held) I'm 38 now and looking to start welding as a hobbyist/homestead situation. Make a chicken feeder, funnels, welding small pipe joints, stiff like that. Gonna have to be self taught, no welding classes in the area and even if there were, my job in the military wouldnt afford me much time to attend classes.
My hand/eye coordination and patience, Id say, is excellent. I have been flying H-60 Blackhawk helicopters for almost a decade on the medevac platform and one of the things I teach new pilots to do is balance that 18,000 lb aircraft on one wheel on a cliff. Or hovering 100 feet up while hoisting our medic. Im not saying all this to brag, all the videos, books and articles I have been reading the past two years talk about how complicated TIG is like you have to have attained Jedi status to even attempt it. And I am ready to drop some money right now on either MIG or TIG to start practicing to finally make all these projects Ive held off for years. I really want TIG because everything I have read and watched praises how versatile it is but again, Jedi status....
I know that was lengthy and not fully expecting a response from you but if you do read this, any feedback would be greatly appreciated.
Just do it, its a steep learning curve but its not insanely difficult to grasp
@@brandon9491 I went with the primeweld 180 mig. I will get a tig later, for now though that mig will do everything I need
The GOAT!!! Thank you sir!
When will we see the 2023 skills, agc welding competition?
its on weldingtipsandtricks facebook
Thank you a lot.
Beleza !muito obrigado por todo o aprendizado 👍👍
I can feed filler rod with the best as long as I'm not doing anything else. But add the foot pedal and the torch and suddenly, my ability to feed the rod is gone. One too many things for my brain I guess.
I've been welding 25 years. Just keep practicing you'll get it.
Just curious what tungsten you were using?
Jody hello, I very like your videos, your videos are one of the best. I try to support your work through your WeldMonger store. On November 13th I made an order, today is December 14th, I still didn’t receive it. I understand maybe you are not aware of it. I think your team could do better work. Thank you for videos.
As a welder, I've always felt like a dummy for not knowing how to solder copper. Some welders actually tig copper. Is this practical, or a waste of gas?
It can be practical for art or odd pieces. But for copper fittings and pipe, solder is the way
I tig brazed my hvac condenser lines because my o2 regulator diaphragm popped in the middle of it. Funny to roll the weld cart over to the side of the house and use a tig torch to silver braze but it worked awesome and hasn’t leaked in a year lol.
Love your videos
Now do Alu mig/mag :)
I love my stubby gloves.
❤❤❤
I'm just amazed that film doesn't cook the camera.
My 2 y/o son asked over my shoulder, “Is that Todd the builder or Bob the builder?”
“No buddy that’s Jody the welder.”
Geez Jodie, your videos are always so helpful but you failed to explain how you were feeding the rod in this one. I saw your thumb moving and your fingers staying still, I can’t replicate it?
If I film it, then I can watch 30 minutes of me dipping tungsten :(
It can feel like a real accomplishment to run quite a few beads and remember “wow I haven’t dipped in a while!”….. then bam DIP! Lol
I have never been able to feed the filler rod, I aways dab
😀😀😀
Question: Where is PrimeWeld made at?
Answer: Like any budget brand, Primeweld is made in China. AND EVERYONE should BE AWARE that they are no different than Apple having their iphones made in china or nike making air jordans there (because it's cheep to make and makes the companies more money as in China it's cheeper because they are using slave labor and no one , not even here , is saying a word about it. Why not?