hey Mike does your welder have gas or is were those welds with flux core?
The welder itself will do either gas or flux, but I am using 75/25 argon/C02.



Michael
hey Mike does your welder have gas or is were those welds with flux core?
Well, I'm doing 1/4" and the manuals all indicate it works fine for 1/4" but you need to do multiple passes. I'm not sure if what I did counts... I would make a pass and then start back at the first area I worked and pass again.. I suspect w/ what I know now about the flux being on the top, maybe I am not doing the best work... But again, it seems to be holding really well, I'm smacking he crap out of the welds w/ the chickenhead and its not budging now.
Oh btw datamike I think you may have the EXACT same welder I have... I f not its very close.. .maybe a slightly better model. Mines the lowest model they had that still did MIG and has all the regulator and hoses etc. something like 145 was the model number
Is your polarity correct? I was using a flux core/mig welder one time and made welds that looked a lot like those. Turns out I had forgot to reverse the polarity when switching to mig from flux core.
Sorry if this was already mentioned, I'm at work and didn't have the time to read through all the pages.
At the risk of sounding stupid, I cant see polarity a problem. Polarity refers to the direction of current flow. In a DC circuit it flows from neg. to pos. In a Ac circuit it changes 120 times a second at least here in America. How do you know the polarity of the transformer feeding your house? The rule is if the system voltage is below 8660v or a 200kva transformer it is positive all others are negative. The power company only cares about this when the parallel transformers or banking them together for three phase voltage. I am missing something so please explain.![]()
I am missing something so please explain.![]()
Actually Phylan is correct about the polarity switch for flux cored. Inside the cover of the Lincoln welder are two terminals (+ & -) and these need to be swapped when going from gas shielding to flux core wire and vice versa.
I believe they come from the factory set for flux. Mine did.
Check the manual....
Michael
I don't know. I'm not expert for sure. But inside my welder are these 2 sets of jumpers. When I'm welding with flux core, they're jumpered a certain way (I can't remember which off the top of my head) and when I'm welding with gas, they're jumpered the other way.
Here's a quick result from a google search. From the Lincoln Electric website:
The terms "straight" and "reverse" polarity are used around the shop. They may also be expressed as "electrode-negative" and "electrode-positive" polarity. The latter terms are more descriptive and will be used throughout this article....
For proper penetration, uniform bead appearance, and good welding results, the correct polarity must be used when welding with any given metallic electrode. Incorrect polarity will cause poor penetration, irregular bead shape, excessive spatter, difficulty in controlling the arc, overheating, and rapid burning of the electrode.
EDIT: Sorry, I was a little late. What he said^