Welding to thinner sheetmetal question-

SCW

NAXJA Forum User
Location
SLC (yuck) UT
This really isn't terribly advanced-

I'm trying to weld some reinforcement onto the body panels. The reinforcement is 16ga steel and I can use a mig welder with either .023 or .035 wire, either gas or not. I tried to do this already by welding about an inch at a time and cooling everything down with a very wet rag, and while I was welding I left the rag on the panel to keep it from getting too hot. The end result looks like crap, as it cooled the body panel got pulled all over and distorted like crazy, so I'll be getting a new panel and doing it again.

How do I weld to the thinner metal without the warping?

Thanks-
 
If it's going to be a cosmetic weld, you need to do it with one of 2 things.

Pulse MIG or TIG. You will still have problems running more than 20" of weld in the horizontal direction on any body panel.

Welding razor blades is good practice for this. :D

--ron
 
Pulse MIG? I don't have access to a TIG, and this only has to be moderatley cosmetic, but the way it warped after the first time I need to at least improve it some.

The reinforcement patch is about 10"x12".

Any other advise? Thanks-
 
IntrepidXJ said:
a bunch of spot welds alternating sides so there is time to cool in between

use the .023 with gas


Only way you can do it, I run the .30 wire without any probs though. Also you can run a 110V flux core if you want, just more cleaning afterward. Don't cool the welds down, your prob causing more warp then your preventing, as well as the welds can crack due to the sudden temp change. The trick is to not get the metal hot in the first place.
 
I think your welding an inch at a time was a big part of the warping. If you look at any photos of body guys doing patch panels (yeah, they're working with same gauge metals, but the process is the same) you'll see that they do spot welds - no continuous beads. When I've watch a small body patch panel being welded into place, the guy put spot welds on like you bolt up a wheel - he started at one end, then went to the other end, then the top, then the bottom - then back to the side he started on. He continued all around until he had the spot welds about 1/2 inch apart all around. Then he filled in between the existing spots, still alternating sides to keep things from getting too hot. Sure seemed to keep the distortion down. I'm thinking that the process doesn't change with thicker metal being used on one part of the seam.

My .02 anyway.
 
YELLAHEEP said:
I think your welding an inch at a time was a big part of the warping. If you look at any photos of body guys doing patch panels (yeah, they're working with same gauge metals, but the process is the same) you'll see that they do spot welds - no continuous beads. When I've watch a small body patch panel being welded into place, the guy put spot welds on like you bolt up a wheel - he started at one end, then went to the other end, then the top, then the bottom - then back to the side he started on. He continued all around until he had the spot welds about 1/2 inch apart all around. Then he filled in between the existing spots, still alternating sides to keep things from getting too hot. Sure seemed to keep the distortion down. I'm thinking that the process doesn't change with thicker metal being used on one part of the seam.

My .02 anyway.
X2 100%
 
Captain Ron said:
Do I have to show you guys everything? :D

--ron
oh yes all mighty welding goorue, you DO!! :D


besides, if its a trail rig ( i assume it is ) rust isnt an issue, but i may be wrong.
 
Ludakris said:
on "Trucks!" they just glue the stuff together... :roll:
LMAO! :shocked:
 
Don't laugh. I use the professional body working adhesives from SEMA and they will surprise you. If I was overlapping a panel, a thin coat overall would yield a stronger bond than a weld. It remains somewhat flexible so cracking is not an issue. The applicator gun runs about $75 and the adhesive is about $30 a tube. They demo it by gluing two sheets of metal with about an inch of overlap. After curing, they are pulled apart in a press. The metal fails before the adhesive.
 
old_man said:
Don't laugh. I use the professional body working adhesives from SEMA and they will surprise you. If I was overlapping a panel, a thin coat overall would yield a stronger bond than a weld. It remains somewhat flexible so cracking is not an issue. The applicator gun runs about $75 and the adhesive is about $30 a tube. They demo it by gluing two sheets of metal with about an inch of overlap. After curing, they are pulled apart in a press. The metal fails before the adhesive.
know of any decent alternative that doesn't require a $75 applicator gun? does the one you mentioned work well with aluminum, stainless, galvanized, etc?
 
The technique I've used welding XJ rear inner fender seams back together was .023 wire, with a C25 mix gas. Basically, I place spot welds along the seam at 1"-1.5" intervals. Then go back and place a spot right next to it all the way along. If you're following what I'm saying the weld should be like this:
Code:
.    .    .    .    .    .    .   <-First Pass
..   ..   ..   ..   ..   ..   ..  <-Second Pass
...  ...  ...  ...  ...  ...  ... <-Third and so-on

This isn't optimal, but its a good compromise of low warp and reasonably easy/fast procedure.
 
old_man said:
Don't laugh. I use the professional body working adhesives from SEMA and they will surprise you. If I was overlapping a panel, a thin coat overall would yield a stronger bond than a weld. It remains somewhat flexible so cracking is not an issue. The applicator gun runs about $75 and the adhesive is about $30 a tube. They demo it by gluing two sheets of metal with about an inch of overlap. After curing, they are pulled apart in a press. The metal fails before the adhesive.

Something like this is what I should have done in the first place. I'd be very interested in it, maybe I can scab together some kind of applicator?
 
They have those small epoxy tubes for sale at the parts stores. I think that is what they used on Trucks. Has anyone used one of those?? For non-structural areas, I wouldn't be afraid of it (for a wheeling rig anyway).
 
I remember when I worked at a body shop a few years back. We had a Tacoma come through with a smashed bed side. We just drilled out the welds and the side nearly fell off. After that we used that "glue" stuff and stuck it back on. Worked pretty good. I know the guy who has the truck and it still looks great.
 
Excellent! Does this stuff need to be mixed like normal epoxy, or can you squeeze it straight onto the panels and stick them together? I assume you would want paint-free surfaces and good clamps.

How well does it work on large panels? Should the center be chopped out and only glue on the edges? Clamping in the center of a large peice would be problematic (theoretical question, mine is a small piece).
 
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