clean metal mig welding
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Jan 25, 2024
clean metal mig welding
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0:00
In this video I want to explain to you how I clean metal for the best possible MIG welds
0:07
Now as I've mentioned before in other videos, strictly speaking you don't need to get back to bare metal in order for a MIG weld to work
0:15
But for it to work to its full potential and for the bead to look as nice as possible and be as strong as possible, you do need to get back to bare metal
0:24
This is a piece of black iron pipe. It's called black iron because it's black on the surface, although the actual metal isn't really black
0:33
What you're seeing on the surface here is something called mill scale
0:38
So you can imagine this started off as molten steel and it was extruded
0:45
Actually this is welded pipe. I don't know if you can see that, but there's a weld bead in there
0:52
So it actually started off as some flat stock and it was bent in a factory and welded
0:58
And it's seamlessly welded. You can't really see the weld on this side. But during that process of heating and forming and manufacturing, there's a kind of, well the mill scale forms on the surface
1:10
It's a product of oxygen and I guess manufacturing oils and pressures and all kinds of things
1:17
And that's why this is black. Now it's starting to rust a little bit here too because it's been outside
1:23
Bottom line is that we want fresh, clean steel if we can for the best possible welds
1:30
And the usual tool for that is something like this. An angle grinder with what's called a flap wheel, which is an abrasive
1:40
It removes a fair amount of metal. It does it fairly quickly in most cases
1:46
But it's not the best for this sort of thing because it actually travels so quickly
1:52
The maximum RPM on this disc is over 12,000. I think it probably spins at a full 10,000
1:58
I don't know if it says anywhere here. Yes, sorry, 8,500. So it's really spinning very quickly and so quickly in fact that it can actually burnish the surface of the metal
2:11
and not remove the mill scale as fast as you might like or as you can
2:17
What I have found works better than that, and it's nicer to use too
2:21
it's more controllable and it's more effective, and that's a regular woodworking sander
2:27
This is a five-inch random orbit sander. As I said, it's meant for working with wood
2:31
but it happens to do a great job getting off this mill scale
2:36
I'm going to show you that, but before I do, I just want to point out a couple of different abrasives
2:42
This is the sort of abrasive disc that's sold most commonly for use on a five-inch random orbit sander
2:49
It works great on wood and it works pretty good on metal too
2:54
But what works better on metal is this mesh style abrasive. So you can see my fingers through it, I think
3:02
And the advantage there is that there's... Well, the advantage for woodworking is that there's all kinds of holes in here
3:10
and sanders like this have a built-in vacuum system, a little vacuum system
3:14
These holes suck the dust in, trap it in this canister. So something like this maximizes the airflow and the sawdust pickup when you're dealing with wood
3:28
But what I have found with metal is that the open weave clogs up less
3:33
The abrasive lasts longer, quite a bit longer than regular sandpaper type abrasives
3:39
And it just does a great job. There's probably different companies that make this kind of thing
3:45
This is made by Diablo. This grit is actually a little fine
3:50
180 is a bit fine for what I'm doing here. 80 grit would be better
3:55
But anyway, let's take a look and I'll show you how it works and what clean steel really looks like
4:26
Now, that is bare metal. And you can see where the sander kind of worked through the mill scale
4:34
This isn't as big of a job as you might think because you really only need to do it where you're going to actually do the welding
4:42
Later on, subsequent steps might involve cleaning the whole thing that you've made
4:48
and applying some kind of paint. But as far as cleaning metal for welding goes, that's the ticket
4:55
That's perfectly clean. And you'll get really good results if you try to weld to that
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