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Help Welding a Welder Cart - Printable Version

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RE: Help Welding a Welder Cart - f350ca - 04-21-2012

If your welder will handle it try a small spool of .035. The only time I use .025 is for sheet metal.
Greg


RE: Help Welding a Welder Cart - DaveH - 04-21-2012

(04-20-2012, 06:40 PM)stevec Wrote: I share Ed's question. I'm new to wire feed welding ( being an old stick welder) and can't fathom much differefnce between .025" and .030" wire. Is there that much difference in the mass of .030 and .025 wire/

Hi Steve,
I think the mass (per unit length) difference is about 40% which is quite a bit Smile
Smiley-eatdrink004
DaveH


RE: Help Welding a Welder Cart - doubleboost - 04-21-2012

Hi
You can get more amps through a thicker wire
The differance between 0.6 & 0.8mm is massive
John


RE: Help Welding a Welder Cart - stevec - 04-21-2012

Dave, I find the difference between .O25 and .030 to be 25% greater. 40% would give you .035 wire.
Greg, OK now I've got to add .035 wire to the list.


RE: Help Welding a Welder Cart - EdK - 04-21-2012

Steve,

Get a roll of each. That's what I did since I know squat about welding and figured I might as well have each size on hand.

Ed


RE: Help Welding a Welder Cart - f350ca - 04-21-2012

Steve I'd skip the .03, I've never used it. .025 for the really thin stuff then burn it in with .035.
Oh .025 - .030 is 20% by the way.
Greg


RE: Help Welding a Welder Cart - EdK - 04-21-2012

Greg,

At what thickness steel would you start using .035 at?

Thanks,
Ed


RE: Help Welding a Welder Cart - f350ca - 04-21-2012

I always have .035 in the machine, only switch it and the gas that has the oxygen in it out to weld 16 gauge and below. 10 and 12 gauge would be fine with the .025 probably beter but not worth switching for. I get occasional blow troughs on 12 gauge if I hesitate or don't have a perfect fit up but blame that more on the gas. The 2% oxygen makes the arc a LOT hotter.
Greg


RE: Help Welding a Welder Cart - DaveH - 04-21-2012

(04-21-2012, 11:56 AM)stevec Wrote: Dave, I find the difference between .O25 and .030 to be 25% greater. 40% would give you .035 wire.
Greg, OK now I've got to add .035 wire to the list.
Steve,
I think you are referring to the diameter increase of the wire.
I was referring to the mass increase of the wire.
Smiley-eatdrink004
DaveH


RE: Help Welding a Welder Cart - f350ca - 04-21-2012

Duh! Your right Dave, I was thinking dia. Its the area that matters, 40% increase to .03 , 90% increase when you go to .035 . So guess you'd need twice the current to maintain the arc, assuming the same voltage and wire speed. Like I said my machine sets those for me. Do you keep the voltage and wire speed the same or adjust for wire size. Assuming your welding the same material?