1. Change your collet and or gas lens 2. To much or not enough shielding gas 3. Wind blowing in your puddle 4. Contaminated argon bottle, very rare but it happens.
I so have to learn this technique but im finding it very hard no one to work with me at work so ive been trying what i can awesome video im just going to keep trying so far i get my suck back at the bottom the bottom is the hardest for me
Usually caused by moving too slow and/or pointing the tungsten straight in the middle of the gap instead of washing the puddle side to side. Also made worse by losing connection with filler metal and puddle. Use enough heat to make the puddle flow nicely and practice moving quick but steady with a little side to side. Don’t sit in the middle.
@christophergavitt4095 thank you I'm going to keep trying because my beads on the face look good but it's the root that's more important it's hard but with time I think I will get it I'll keep watching videos to pick up more tips and tricks thank the comment
Right... I'm sure he has the sensitivity of the lens on a higher setting, it also looks like his head is far enough back that the sensors are catching the UV... if I tried this my hood would be touching the pipe in an effort to see the puddle lol. Doesn't get much harder than that!!
On the bottom if the pipe his head is pretty close though, it would be difficult to position your head so your lens isn't flashing like crazy one would think
Miller is going for a golden name here, oh no not using selling strategies and branding at all nope that's wasn't a well done sales role play at all, with some great welding to boot. See what I did there A