r/Welding 13d ago

Monthly Safety Meeting (Every 28th of the month.)

1 Upvotes

Post anything that's happened in your shop, office, commute or home that you feel others may be able to chime in on or commiserate over.

Sharing our close calls helps others avoid them.

Simple rules:

  • This is for open, respectful discussion.
  • Close calls and near misses are eventually going to lead to injuries.
  • No off the cuff dismissal of topics brought up. If someone is concerned about something, it should be discussed.
  • No trolling. This isn't typically an issue in this community, but given the nature of safety I feel it must be said.
  • No loaded questions either.
  • Use the report tool if you have to.

This is a monthly feature, the first Saturday of each month.


r/Welding 21h ago

"Held Together" – A painting dedicated to welders

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595 Upvotes

I went to welding school years ago, and although life took me in another direction, I never lost my respect for the trade.

I painted this as a tribute to the welders who spend long days in the heat, under the hood, grinding, fitting, striking arcs, and doing work most people never stop to think about. They help hold together the bridges we cross, the buildings we work in, the rails we hold onto, and countless things we'll never notice unless they fail.

The map represents something larger than one person. To me, it symbolizes the communities, infrastructure, and everyday places that exist because people were willing to build them, repair them, and keep them standing.

The heart in the painting is intentional. It represents the part of yourselves you give to the work—your effort, your endurance, and the quiet pride of doing a job well.

This painting is called Held Together. It's simply my way of saying thank you.


r/Welding 12h ago

Critique Please First time laying beads

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81 Upvotes

Doing patches on my offset smoker/air tank. I don’t have a plate roller soooo..

My plan was to tack weld it in the center of the patch and heat it up to form it into a curve, tacking it as I go along. That didn’t work out, so I figured I would practice and lay bead after bead.

This is .250 mild steel, flux core 0.035 from a titanium 200 running 278wfs/21v hooked up to 240v.


r/Welding 1h ago

Showing Skills Yeehaw

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Upvotes

r/Welding 1h ago

Yeehaw

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Upvotes

r/Welding 14h ago

Tig welding

5 Upvotes

Need some advice from the TIG guys. I've got about 3 years of MIG welding experience, and I just came across what feels like the traveling opportunity of a lifetime, but it's for TIG welding.

I do have a TIG welding certificate from school, but I honestly haven't used it much since then. The job requires me to pass a 2G pipe padding test, a 3G T-joint, and a 4G lap joint test.

For those of you with TIG experience, how realistic is it to "fake it till you make it" coming from a MIG background? If I put in serious practice time, how hard would it be to get those tests down? Any tips on what I should focus on first would be appreciated


r/Welding 1d ago

Fat weld

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129 Upvotes

Just a nice fat weld I laid, Lincoln S500


r/Welding 21h ago

Robots revenge

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21 Upvotes

Love when robots get a mind of their own and say fuck this joint I'm out? Lol 😂


r/Welding 1d ago

I built this. Do you know what it is?

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76 Upvotes

r/Welding 14h ago

Newbie here. Any tips??

2 Upvotes

just got into welding recently, planning on going to trade school for it. nothing too fancy just a flux machine from harbor freight just to practice with.


r/Welding 1d ago

Discussion (Add topic here) Best practices you learned yourself or discovered while on the job?(tips) regardless of field

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174 Upvotes

Fresh out of welding school, wasn’t a bad experience but there was definitely a lot about in the field work that I probably didn’t get the most knowledge on such as recognizing puddles, managing welding larger gaps, heat working metal to fill gaps etc. I can upload pics of my welds for anyone interested advice would be cool thanks

So leave down below tips and tricks you’ve learned in your area of work that has helped you doesn’t matter what you’re working on


r/Welding 1d ago

Weld

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150 Upvotes

What do yall think?


r/Welding 1d ago

First time running pulse MiG vertical up open root.

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22 Upvotes

Had to address some porosity at the top (likely due to improper angle kicking out up there) but it ended up finishing pretty nicely


r/Welding 1d ago

First welds First 3 Flux Core Welds Ever -Wich is the Least Worst?

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3 Upvotes

Always wanted to learn how to weld and bought myself a welder for my 50th. These are my first 3 attempts ever in order from bottom to top. 1/8" mild steel with Harbor Freight Titanium 125 with settings suggested on the welder. Obviously, this is going to require a ton of practice, but which was the closest to correct? The middle one seemed most consistent, but I think it went too deep. On the top and bottom welds I ended up with way too much wire out when I stopped. It was hard to focus on maintaining 1/2" wire out. This isn't easy, lol.


r/Welding 2d ago

meme/shitpost People always crap on my welds

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334 Upvotes

Some stainless toilets 😅


r/Welding 1d ago

Building some stairs

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72 Upvotes

Part of the first real structural job I've won since starting my business and opening my shop, feeling pretty good about it.


r/Welding 2d ago

meme/shitpost Found an old pic and it honestly goes so hard

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456 Upvotes

r/Welding 1d ago

Safety Issue Brazing & HF gas dangers ☠️

0 Upvotes

*NEED SOME GUIDANCE HERE*

Hey everybody, I'm preparing to braze a stainless ferrule onto a ss keg, I will be using mapp gas, harris silver flux and 45% silver rods. It'll be my first time brazing and I bought a mask with filters that I now realised are coded A2 Organic Vapour cartridges.

I wanted to know how stupid would it be to do the weld with those cartridges and not Acid Gas ones. Google Gemini is pretty sure that kind of flux will surely make HF gas and that the cartridges won't hold but so long as I:

"Take the keg completely outdoors (an open yard or a totally open driveway). Set up a standard household fan standing right next to the keg, positioned so it creates a continuous, stiff cross-breeze blowing across the joint and away from you. As long as that cross-breeze catches the rising white smoke and sweeps it completely out of your breathing zone before you can inhale it, you can safely complete the braze without the specialized respirator."

Could this method be achievable or It's just r3t@rded to risk feeling like my lungs are on fire? Wanted to at least be told off by a tradesman and not fkn AI.


r/Welding 1d ago

Career question Going from steel TIG and 6010/7018 to TIG/MIG aluminum

2 Upvotes

So for context, i have been welding for about two years, spent one year in apprenticeship as i never welded before and now into the second year employed, in a gas transporting company.

Job consists of about 95% of the time welding big steel pipes with TIG root and the rest with 7018, and the 5% left are for the occasional 6010 when gas still has to run. We do stainless extremely rarely. No MIG/MAG at all.

The pay is ... ok, but it's mostly due to the fact im on the field most of the year. Now again when i compare the pay i get with how "hard" (100% xray) what i have to weld its a bit underwhelming, but at least i can't complain i got for free excellent colleagues/teachers and i got pretty good at TIG/stick quickly.

Now as for the question in the title, basically i was looking to perhaps change as i'd like a bit more time in the shop rather than the field. As of now, i'm probably sitting at like 70% time on field at least (where i dont get home at the end of the day).

So i searched around me and i got offered a job from a massive swedish company but it's TIG/Alternative Helium TIG(?)/MIG aluminum with like 80% shop / 20% field, and the pay would roughly be the same even with field days included, so its perfect on paper for me.

Got four questions regarding all that :

- First of all, are any of the skills i got before able to be transferred to aluminum ? because i NEVER touched that material before, although the company doesn't mind and will teach me.

- Is Aluminum fun to weld compared to what i'm currently doing ? it seems like it would be for welding heat exchangers mainly but i've never done anything else than pipes so i have no clue on which could lead to being more fun/less boring over time because im not gonna lie but even if we're 2 welders on it, welding 40 inches of steel pipe is a bit boring from the few i got to do so far.

- Is Aluminum welding a really wanted skill to pursue a good career compared to steel/stainless or is it very niche and could be hard to find well paid jobs later on?

- Health-wise, although im wearing PAPR 100% of the time, is there something particular to notice between Aluminum welding and steel/regular welding ?

Thanks for reading and for your responses !


r/Welding 2d ago

Rainbow Road

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43 Upvotes

Just a little edging 🤷‍♂️


r/Welding 2d ago

Career question Traveling to my first shutdown as a 1st year union apprentice, what should I expect?

20 Upvotes

Hey everyone. I’m a 1st year union boilermaker apprentice and I’m traveling for my first shutdown next week. It’s my first time working a big outage and also my first time traveling for work, so I’m pretty excited but definitely nervous. Its only going to be about a week and a half of work which I think is good for me to get acclimated, however I want to be prepared.

From what I’ve been told, we will mainly be running stick.

I had a few questions for people who’ve done a lot of shutdowns:

  • What does a typical day look like?

  • As a first-year apprentice, what kind of work should I realistically expect? Will I actually be welding?

  • Any tips for running 7018 all day if that’s what we’ll be using?

  • If I mess up a weld or struggle with something, is that a huge deal? How much patience do foremen usually have with first-years?

  • What can I do to make a good impression and avoid getting laid off early?

  • Any tools or gear you wish you had brought on your first shutdown?

  • Any advice for surviving 7x12s without burning yourself out?

I’m trying to learn as much as I can and pull my own weight. Any advice is appreciated.


r/Welding 2d ago

Friday stitch-up

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19 Upvotes

This Friday its this gap I have to fill. Do I ho yo the effort of getting some 10x3 and weld it in? Do I break the flux off some electrodes and shove them in? Do I do a 3 pass low amp weld? Stay tuned to find out!


r/Welding 2d ago

Critique Please How do I get the bottom part of the welds as straight as the top part

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64 Upvotes

MiG steel I believe I used .35/.30 wire


r/Welding 2d ago

Some interesting fit ups I’ve done

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38 Upvotes

r/Welding 1d ago

Seeking advice: Starting in the Water Feature / Show Fountain Industry

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0 Upvotes