- Joined
- Dec 23, 2023
I have some questions about practicing to keep welding skills usable.
A couple years back, I took some classes on welding. MIG pretty easy to do, and I've since made useful parts with it. Even though I am not welding often and still suck at it, I can pick up the MIG gun, zap some shit together, and it will be serviceable. The beads will be ugly and look like they were done by a retard because they were, but the part will work.
TIG was initially tricky, but about halfway through that 1-hour training session, something clicked, and it felt almost like the soldering I've done in my work with hobby electronics. At the end of the 1 hour session, I was laying down some very nice-looking (to me, anyway) beads.
But, it's clearly a skill that perishes without practice, because not a month later, I went to go TIG some basic mild steel parts, and I had completely lost the touch. No matter where I set the amps, no matter what I did with the pedal, the only result was shallow pools or burn through, electrodes dipped in the pool or touched by the filler rod, and generally wrecked material. So clearly, I need to practice a lot fucking more.
Is there a particular material I should be practicing with to hone those TIG skills, like a particular kind of steel or other metal that lends itself to teaching good TIG technique? Or will any scrap mild steel I can get my hands on suffice for the purpose of practice?
With the torch itself, or the control pedal, is there some particular fundamental technique I need to be focusing on so I'm not constantly having tiny pools or burn through, or dipping the electrode or touching the filler rod?
A couple years back, I took some classes on welding. MIG pretty easy to do, and I've since made useful parts with it. Even though I am not welding often and still suck at it, I can pick up the MIG gun, zap some shit together, and it will be serviceable. The beads will be ugly and look like they were done by a retard because they were, but the part will work.
TIG was initially tricky, but about halfway through that 1-hour training session, something clicked, and it felt almost like the soldering I've done in my work with hobby electronics. At the end of the 1 hour session, I was laying down some very nice-looking (to me, anyway) beads.
But, it's clearly a skill that perishes without practice, because not a month later, I went to go TIG some basic mild steel parts, and I had completely lost the touch. No matter where I set the amps, no matter what I did with the pedal, the only result was shallow pools or burn through, electrodes dipped in the pool or touched by the filler rod, and generally wrecked material. So clearly, I need to practice a lot fucking more.
Is there a particular material I should be practicing with to hone those TIG skills, like a particular kind of steel or other metal that lends itself to teaching good TIG technique? Or will any scrap mild steel I can get my hands on suffice for the purpose of practice?
With the torch itself, or the control pedal, is there some particular fundamental technique I need to be focusing on so I'm not constantly having tiny pools or burn through, or dipping the electrode or touching the filler rod?