MIG Welder Question
#1693991
11/03/14 09:21 PM
11/03/14 09:21 PM
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Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 1,377 Tennessee
WyleECoyote
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LINCOLN PRO-MIG 140 - What do I set this gauge on? And I presume I read the numbers in black, not red?
Wile E. Coyote Super Genius, Lover of FCA US LLC Products ************* 68 Road Runner (440 4-spd), 71 Superbee (383 slap), 71 Charger 500 (383 4-spd wA/C 1of 182), 72 Imperial, 74 Charger SE (440 sunroof), 84 D350 Crew-cab Dually (440), 75 D300 Dually Tandem (318 4-speed)
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Re: MIG Welder Question
[Re: WyleECoyote]
#1693994
11/03/14 09:45 PM
11/03/14 09:45 PM
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Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 28,312 Cincinnati, Ohio
Challenger 1
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Quote:
LINCOLN PRO-MIG 140 - What do I set this gauge on? And I presume I read the numbers in black, not red?
The gauge on the right is how much is left in the bottle, the one on the left is flow as you know I'm betting.
It's set too high in the picture above IMO for most welding. You need just enough flow to keep your welds pure and no more. Got to experiment to find what's best for what your welding. Got to keep your gas nozzle clean so there's un interrupted gas flow. I use nozzle dip to keep splatter from sticking to my nozzle.
I'd start down around 10 and go from there.
Does anyone remember the flow meters with the floating ball?
The gauge above I believe is reading in cubic foot of air per minute or hour or something like that, not psi.
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Re: MIG Welder Question
[Re: justinp61]
#1693997
11/04/14 01:15 AM
11/04/14 01:15 AM
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Joined: Sep 2009
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WyleECoyote
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Alcon - Thank you! I appreciate all the welding sensei advice! I will be doing some novice welding tomorrow and I didn't have a clue where the gas pressure needed to be. Now, thanks to those of you that commented, I have an idea and will do as suggested by you. Tomorrow should be smooth sailing!
Wile E. Coyote Super Genius, Lover of FCA US LLC Products ************* 68 Road Runner (440 4-spd), 71 Superbee (383 slap), 71 Charger 500 (383 4-spd wA/C 1of 182), 72 Imperial, 74 Charger SE (440 sunroof), 84 D350 Crew-cab Dually (440), 75 D300 Dually Tandem (318 4-speed)
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Re: MIG Welder Question
[Re: WyleECoyote]
#1693998
11/04/14 02:12 AM
11/04/14 02:12 AM
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Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 1,305 Lakewood, Colorado
herkamer
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For most mig welding you want 20cf/hr. Your left gauge is liters/min on the outside black scale. Can't see what the is under the bottom of the needle to determine what scale the red is. Based on math and what the old interweb says for conversion from l/min to cf/hr, it should be cf/hr. 20cf/hr is 9.4l/min. Adds up with the scale. Keep in mind that gauge is calibrated for argon/CO2 blend gas. If you are running pure CO2, the flow rates are a little different. Start at 10 on the black and adjust from there.
Matt 69 Dart Swinger 340 83 W350, Megasquirted with 46RH Old news: 72 Demon street/race mobile Latest: 70 Duster backhalf car and even more
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Re: MIG Welder Question
[Re: herkamer]
#1693999
11/04/14 06:19 AM
11/04/14 06:19 AM
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Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 3,277 West Coast, USA
jbc426
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I weld outside a lot with the usual breeze. I have mine jacked up to 40 psi.
Thanks for the enlightenment, and gas savings.
1970 Plymouth 'Cuda #'s 440-6(block in storage)currently 493" 6 pack, Shaker, 5 speed Passon, 4.10's 1968 Plymouth Barracuda Convertible 408 Magnum EFI with 4 speed automatic overdrive, 3800 stall lock-up converter and 4.30's (closest thing to an automatic 5 speed going)
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Re: MIG Welder Question
[Re: DDodger]
#1694004
11/05/14 07:44 PM
11/05/14 07:44 PM
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Joined: Oct 2003
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justinp61
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Quote:
i think you gonna find both those gauges are pressure, not flow. most flow indicators are long tall ball in a tube deal use whatever gives good weld outdoors in wind, needs more gas
Wrong, the gauge on the left is flow, CHF. My miller has the same exact setup.
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Re: MIG Welder Question
[Re: justinp61]
#1694005
11/05/14 09:18 PM
11/05/14 09:18 PM
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Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 22,696 Bitopia
jcc
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If you can't dazzle em with diamonds..
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Quote:
Quote:
i think you gonna find both those gauges are pressure, not flow. most flow indicators are long tall ball in a tube deal use whatever gives good weld outdoors in wind, needs more gas
Wrong, the gauge on the left is flow, CHF. My miller has the same exact setup.
My first impression was it was a pressure gauge, and others were confusing to me commenting on flow, it was difficult for me to make out the markings, but I assume those that can see it are reading cfm, and yes, proper flow is of course only measured in CFM. Has it been mentioned yet that too much flow can have a downside by sucking small amounts of air?
Reality check, that half the population is smarter then 50% of the people and it's a constantly contested fact.
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