
Just saying,
John
There's low, medium, high, cutting, and ground taps on the welder.noddybrian wrote: Back to the old welder - I can't make out in that picture - but where the leads plug in it seems like there's a spare place - could be another voltage tapping - would need a closer picture to say for sure.
Actually John, I was wondering.AKweldshop wrote:Sling-it, we're gonna stop the hi-jack and get back to "7018AC rod problem".
I put a thread on welder vs. welder in the general shop talk section, lets finish it over there.
Any more tips we can share, sling-it?
~John
I have used 7018 as a gouging rod a few times but on 1/8" sheet and with no water. Crank it up to 200-250 amps and it will work, although it will make a mess.weldin mike 27 wrote:Hey,
I heard if you dip a 7018 in water, and crank up the amps, it'll cut and gouge like an animal.
Mick
Choose wisely grasshopper.sling-it wrote:Wow, this is starting to sound like I should be lighting up pretty much like any other rod. It's far from that for sure. I hardly ever stick anything else I've used, so I should be able to get a light even if I can't keep it going.
I'm going to check some stuff out. I'll check back in if I get it lit.
I have never had any problem with the lincoln 7018ac rods(3/32) 90 amps. I call them my butter rod, because they go on smooth and leave a nice looking surface. I really can not say much about your situation as I have an inverter and running DC, with ocv of 70. I do not use a rod oven, but keep my rods in a sealed container until I use them.sling-it wrote:Well, I had a chance to give this an honest try tonight.
I got the rod to light several times. Stuck it a few times, but overall, it sucked.![]()
I figured out what is happening. First off, the Hobart rods are not in an oven. I'm not sure if this is the entire reason, but I believe the flux is the root of my problem.
I finally got a 1/8" rod to burn at about 180 amps, but it burnt through the 1/4" scrap I was tinkering on in no time. At 160 amps, the rod lit, then immediately burned up inside the flux about 1/8", and proceeded to cap itself with slag and go out immediately. After cranking it up, the rod would burn, but not correctly. I also had a small amount of 3/32", but it took about 130 amps to get it to stay lit, which burned down the rod as fast as it possibly could (kinda reminded me of what I've seen of stick aluminum welding - feed faster than weld. Seriously, 1" = half a rod), and kept lit like it was still under powered.
When done with my little experiment, what welds I had completed were way too hot(of course at that amp), and could hardly be called welds. The 3/32 rods were brand new opened not 5 min before the effort, and the 1/8 rods were kept in a sealed rod tube, so both only had normal atmosphere moisture exposure.
So, I know 7018ac is hydroscopic and technically needs an oven, but I've been under the impression that it would still weld if kept dry without an oven. Apparently all the videos I've seen are all a hoax if the flux is not melting due to the lack of an oven. Outside the possibility that Chucke is a really good video hacker (along side half the other 7018 video creators), Hobart rod must contain asbestos, or some other form of ceramic coating that simply refuses to melt. Either this OR, my old(not my photo, but same as my welder)
is not what these rods are suited for due to the differences in welders of today vs welders of yesteryear.
Could this be brand specific? Is it possible that Lincoln or other brands of rods might not be this way? I did see a video comparison, in which the Hobart rod produced about the same as my results, where the Lincoln actually made a decent weld.
video:
http://youtu.be/AzgcucqqrXI
If I didn't know better the last weld (Hobart) could have been my attempt today.
Mine actually has 4 taps. Low, Med, High, and Cutting (plus Ground of course). As the rod heated up, it did stay lit better. Took several times to get the rod to start running, but I kept having to grind the flux back and the tip off in order to get there.Bill Beauregard wrote:My theory is 7018 is so prone to stick, we always rock back and forth to break it free. If you could keep the flux even with the filler they wouldn't scratch start too bad. Once they light and the rod tip is hot enough, it is a great rod AC or DC. I'm going to try an instant lighting propane torch to preheat the tip. Otherwise you need a long weld joint to scratch several inches until the rod is hot enough. Clean steel works better for that. Once hot, it is possible to bury the rod in the puddle without a stick. I guess your welder is older than mine, with similar circuitry, three taps force, deep, and cutting. Get the hang of keeping a rod lit, or restarting, you'll like 7018. I've used lots of it as first choice with the Twentieth Century.
If the frustration gets the best of you switch to 80T AC+ it's stupid easy.
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