- Location
- New Jersey
I've seen it done, but can't figure it out for myself. Can anyone help me with this? I have a Lincoln Pro 175, with gas. I also have several types of wire on hand.
--Matt
--Matt
You might be confusing "spot welding" with "plug welds", which would make more sense with a MIG. It involves drilling a suitable sized hole in the "top" layer of material. Fill the hole with weld, being sure to get the base material first, and moving outwards to your top layer. Grind flush, or leave it unground as the situation calls for.egon said:I've seen it done, but can't figure it out for myself. Can anyone help me with this? I have a Lincoln Pro 175, with gas. I also have several types of wire on hand.
--Matt
It does. The hole diameter can have a bearing on the amount of shrinkage you will experience.egon said:Would that technique work with overlapped sheetmetal?
--Matt
BrettM said:i guess it would be kinda like spot welding if you had overlapping metal and melted through the top one into the bottom.
Colorado_XJ said:Beez, no offense meant. I hope none was taken. I live metal fab through books (had to for my degree) and have been doing it for more than a few years professionally. A spot weld in my trade is a weld through 2 lapped pieces of gauge metal using whatever process is available. Different sides of the same coin, you and I. On that note, next time I am in Chicago, I might hit you up for a tour of your shop. Always nice to check out another shop.
Egon, how goes the welding?
-Rich
Beezil said:offense???
you kidding me?
hell no.
you delivered 100-percent accurate info, I appreciated the correction.
you have an open invite.
good luck with your projects.
Colorado_XJ said:...Egon, how goes the welding?
-Rich