That intro was fire, theres not many new comments on these videos so hopefully me watching all of them reignites the algorithm! Thankyou for your insanely wide range of knowledge you are willing to teach us
I subscribed right after the first video in this series. I have to say that it’s pretty good, and I’ve watched a few hundred welding and fab videos since I decided to get back into welding. Very concise. Well spoken, with no “um, uh, er”, etc. No cursing or stupid AveE language. I’m grateful for that.
Great video series, Sir. As someone who is starting out, I really appreciate your time and effort. I plan to make a few things around the house and these are really helpful.
Great video! I'm a woodworker but I've been trying to learn welding and fab. I've been through a lot of videos--this was by far the best one--easy to understand and thorough.
Great job over emphasizing the process. It was good reinforcement for someone like me who was recovering from a head injury and needed to clear the cob webs. Keep it up!
Thank you for these videos!! I am trying to learn something about welding, as I need it both for myself and for my work. That is why I got to thank you and others like you that spend your precious time and other own recourses to teach us so many things!! Again: 1000 thanks. God Bless You All
Thanks so much for creating this series! I am a welder student and about to certify in two days, and I know a bunch of things of welding, but needed this info in cutting... The industry requires it a lot!! Thanks so much, expecting more videos like this !!!
Nice Job! Very basic and to the point for the DIY weekend Garager. When I started in Fab, my garage was my church!!! lol... I couldn't wait till the weekend to get in there and continue working on my projects. Such a sense of Freedom, accomplishment and pride!
Amazing video! The Fabricator's work includes the establishment and make of a scope of metallic frameworks to incorporate weight vessels, tank and evaporator make, auxiliary steel frameworks, plate steel frameworks and channeling frameworks. If you looking for any kind of help so you can suggest this association address. (goo.gl/1zHBEN)
I think your part 1 in your part 2 videos or spot-on perfect for anybody just learning it I mean for the first day ever they're learning something from you you did a fabulous job of explaining the types of metal and then out of cut and to join them in the world if you're not a teacher of the trade you should be you did a fabulous job I bet you had a darn good teacher in your youth thank you very much for passing it forward
I like this series, make more! I'm planning on building a custom desk frame here in a bit and yours is the first series I've found that shows practical builds instead of just making pretty welds [or worse yet - people showing welding that have NO idea what they're doing]
The old "vice to the angle trick" OK.. I learned something today. My Dewalt drop saw never gave me exact cuts. I put it down to the wheel and vibration but deep down knew it was the Junky angle adjustment that has so much play in it. . Thank you. I'll do it from now on. A big thumbs up.. The penny dropped down in the land of oz with that simple piece of advice
Again, I'm brand new to this stuff, and this video is EXACTLY what I have been trying to find. I just need to see how something is done to get me started. I'm not expecting to be working on a skyscraper next week.
LOL Two fingers up very cool used to seeing two thumbs up nice change. good video not boring looking for more of yours as I am just starting to weld. THX !!!!
Love the welding vids. I weld at home. I work on cars mostly. I have a small gas-less mig. works very well for what I use it for. Id like to learn more. THANKS! keep up the good vids!!! -Jim
very nice video wish I could have heard what type of welder you were using. if I can find out how to weld very thin metal using a household plug, I am golden. thanks for the videos sir.
TIG produces, without a doubt, the overall highest-quality welds around of the 5 major welding processes (oxyacetylene, SMAW, GMAW, GTAW and flux core arc welding). Food grade stainless piping, commonly used in commercial pharmaceutical, sanitation and other industries requiring special alloy bonds. These include stainless steel, in addition to nonferrous metallic compounds such as nickel, cobalt, aluminum, magnesium and copper to name a few. It also has no fume emissions or slag/spatter.
That's a really useful method. I like it, but it also eats a lot of you're time. Here's what i would do instead of using so many clamps and time. Get as even as possible by eye balling it, then place a small tack on each corner, then square it off with the measuring tape. Then... you get the idea. Great vid
I just wanted to take a second to thank you for this video!! its very imformative and easy to learn from!! if your not a teacher you should be. also what are good schools to get a welding certificate In order to land a good job? thank you again for this awesome video
Do u have any videos on how to install and fabricate horse corrals??! id love to learn some basics!!!! i live out in the country and there is alot of potential for welding and fabrication.
I am starting out in welding and I'm not sure what kind of welder to get. I want to be able to fix small farm tractors and do some farm equipment and other stuff from scratch. Should I get a mig or stick?
damn this is a very helpful video i learn something :) I'm not a welder but im trying to learn to get a job :) keep uploading new videos so i can learn more
Thank you for the tutorial. Those chop saws are cheaper than expected, I'll get one and use it to cut a ton of electrical conduit tubing I got for free. Unfortunately the type of metal is unknown to me. While round tubing won't be flush with the square dimensions of a pickup truck, I would like to use it to construct a camper style topper for my pickup. I'm also going to fabricate it into a low end fence line until I buy this home and save up for a permanent fence.
Looks simple enough. I went to my garage and blew holes for about an hour. I lowered my amps now the welds won’t stick. I wish there was a video that would help the beginners on how to start from the beginning. I need to learn my ABCs before I can read a book.
Hi, how do you remove the black residues on carbon steel before painting? With a hammer, torch, grinder or what? Is cleaning the steel really crucial? How long can the paint last when it's put on the raw, ungrinded carbon steel?
Aloha ProRancher! Is it possible to take galvanized pipe and shape it into a rectangular shape? I need to run pipe into a cyclone filter (hot gas) so the intake needs to conform in order for it to work the best.
Scba's . . Nice being prepared. The fire hose you used. Is that running off the house water? Or maybe your on well water?. What's it take to run that ....2" line???? What's your setup for that. Got me thinking. I'll probably get arrested now, when the city catches me wet tapping the 10" main under the road. .lol. I got to take welding class also.
Looks like inch and 3/4 line. Forestry line is usually one inch weeping hose so the camera could be playing a trick on my eyes. Those look like MSA brand SCBA's. Curious how he fills his bottles and hydros his bottles.
As long as your welding skills are up to par, you got full penetration on the weld, so after the grinding, you still have a weld that is as deep as the base metal, and therefore equally as strong.
pretty cool style nice antics with the spider perhaps a bit more depth into the process of what your doing, altogether 4 star out of 5 for a first impression viewer im a newby really getting into welding as a career and im learning a lot from youtube, god bless the youtubers and thanks for making this content where would the world be without you
lol y did u jump at the end when the spider fell lol o and by the way i just painted my savage 7 mag and i used ur technique it cam out great kinda made it look digital