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Summary: Learn overlapping stinger beads in welding from an expert in arc, tig and mig welding in this free DIY video.
Views: 9,995 | Tags: diy, tig, mig, arc, welding, ironwork, vidoes, machinery, home improvement
About the Expert
Malcolm MacDonald Malcolm MacDonald graduated from Connestoga College in 1968 taking the Fitter Welding Program. Since then, he has traveled extensively throughout Canada worki... read more
Hello! My name is Mac and on behalf of expertvillage.com I am going to give you some tips and techniques on welding. The next technique that a student needs to learn to do is make overlapping stringer beads. When a student needs to make a big weld, he uses multiple passes of stringer beads overlapping one another in a specific order to create a larger weld to fill in, for instance of ?? (0025) section of metal. What we do is we run a simple stringer bead on a plate of steel. We chip the slag off of it because you cannot weld over your slag. Slag is composed mainly of oxides and it melts at a higher temperature than the base metal, so you can actually weld over a slag and trap it in the weld puddle. You clean the weld, wire brush it, run another bead as this cross section view here, this is an end view of a number of beads weld on a steel plate. We create one bead of weld, we put another bead of weld right beside it actually overlapping it 50%. We clean it, we put another bead of weld overlapping it. Cover it 50%. Chip the slag off of it. Put another bead of weld, over top of it, so on and so on and so on. What I would have my students do is take a steel plate this large, cover it completely with overlapping stinger beads incorporating proper stops and starts and back steps on the end, fill in the crater and do this perhaps cover 2-3 plates like this, both sides traveling right to left, left to right away from them and back towards them. It is the practice that will make you a good welder. Follow the proper procedure, you cannot fail.
thanks for the great into to mig welding!
Great series! Thanks.