Metalworking Hunttalkers!

Needed a yard roller and the box stores ones were crap. So decided to build my own. Went to the recycling yard and got some steel to repurpose it. Cutting 22” 3/8 wall pipe was a challenge. I had to tack it together and make up a makeshift cutter. DFD326C9-7853-40BF-856F-553C07BC26B5.jpeg2671381A-9092-429C-82DD-7A0F48C1FF95.jpeg27BA2EB5-E65F-4205-8344-521328FB7EC2.jpeg9237BD6B-FFD0-441B-AE4B-B63F76FD1440.jpegC74A65A8-DFEC-4ECF-ABFB-AA25C58D07A3.jpegD98282BF-CF3C-49EC-A948-5CB21842229B.jpeg I don’t claim to be that great of a welder, it’s a yard roller.

Weight with water came in just over 1500lbs. That should flatten a few mole hills.
 
Needed a yard roller and the box stores ones were crap. So decided to build my own. Went to the recycling yard and got some steel to repurpose it. Cutting 22” 3/8 wall pipe was a challenge. I had to tack it together and make up a makeshift cutter. View attachment 273152View attachment 273154View attachment 273155View attachment 273161View attachment 273162View attachment 273164 I don’t claim to be that great of a welder, it’s a yard roller.

Weight with water came in just over 1500lbs. That should flatten a few mole hills.
This is the type of stuff I want to see more of.
Redneck engineering executed properly is freaking awesome. Good job man!
Is that squirt gun a Lincoln 140?
 
This is the type of stuff I want to see more of.
Redneck engineering executed properly is freaking awesome. Good job man!
Is that squirt gun a Lincoln 140?
Thanks, my Dad and I did projects like this my whole life. I don’t honestly remember, I inherited it from my uncle and Dad. I would have to walk out and look at it and it’s cold out. Lol
 
Needed a yard roller and the box stores ones were crap. So decided to build my own. Went to the recycling yard and got some steel to repurpose it. Cutting 22” 3/8 wall pipe was a challenge. I had to tack it together and make up a makeshift cutter. View attachment 273152View attachment 273155 I don’t claim to be that great of a welder, it’s a yard roller.

Weight with water came in just over 1500lbs. That should flatten a few mole hills.
What's the setup with the cutting wheel grinder and the 2x4's? 3/8" had to burn through 4.5" wheels like there's no tomorrow!
It appears a means to mount the grinder to maintain a clean, predefined cut line?

I dig this type of, make what's needed. Very cool!
 
What's the setup with the cutting wheel grinder and the 2x4's? 3/8" had to burn through 4.5" wheels like there's no tomorrow!
It appears a means to mount the grinder to maintain a clean, predefined cut line?

I dig this type of, make what's needed. Very cool!
I wanted a clean cut that was square. The pipe came just torched into 7-8’ sections. I had to temporarily mount the shaft to get it to turn true. From there it took me 7 cut off discs and a harbor freight grinder. I drilled holes thru the guard and screwed it to a 2x4. Then screwed that with a hinge to the wooden frame I had squared up. That cheap grinder caught fire on the last cut about 90% thru. Lol

I took my good one and finished it. It turned out good for what I had to work with.
 
I wanted a clean cut that was square. The pipe came just torched into 7-8’ sections. I had to temporarily mount the shaft to get it to turn true. From there it took me 7 cut off discs and a harbor freight grinder. I drilled holes thru the guard and screwed it to a 2x4. Then screwed that with a hinge to the wooden frame I had squared up. That cheap grinder caught fire on the last cut about 90% thru. Lol

I took my good one and finished it. It turned out good for what I had to work with.
Flip over a flat furniture dolly next time and use it for a pipe roller. (Rotate the fixed castors 180°)
Either way dude, that came out sweet.
 
Flip over a flat furniture dolly next time and use it for a pipe roller. (Rotate the fixed castors 180°)
Either way dude, that came out sweet.
That is exactly how I envisioned doing it when I saw the picture of his cutting the pipe. Cheap casters squared up, or a furniture dolly if it worked out.

I wanted a clean cut that was square. The pipe came just torched into 7-8’ sections. I had to temporarily mount the shaft to get it to turn true. From there it took me 7 cut off discs and a harbor freight grinder. I drilled holes thru the guard and screwed it to a 2x4. Then screwed that with a hinge to the wooden frame I had squared up. That cheap grinder caught fire on the last cut about 90% thru. Lol

I took my good one and finished it. It turned out good for what I had to work with.
I love how the Harbor Freight grinder was a consumable! Nice work!
 
Flip over a flat furniture dolly next time and use it for a pipe roller. (Rotate the fixed castors 180°)
Either way dude, that came out sweet.
My floor is sloping to a drain, the pipe would likely walked, giving me a spiral cut. Also that coating on the pipe is very uneven and clumpy.

I already had the parts to do it the way I did, I just had to sacrifice a couple 2x4s from a shipping crate.
 
Slowly but surely, coming together... It's been a few years since I last used the spool gun (Miller 150).

I forgot how high the temp has to be. I knew it was higher for aluminum though, the world stopped shaking when I dialed it up to 7 for 1/8". Then repetition on the project, better beads each run. Chit ones to begin. Haha!

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IMG_20230424_153557447_HDR.jpg

Next to figure:
Hold to secure - Trying to stay from pins and bolt/nut type connection to lock the extension to the boat ladder.

How to frame the remainder - Intend to double the thickness of the boat step with the extension.
Still figuring how to connect the pivot point of the boat ladder to the extension.

I dig these hobby projects. Clears the mind of work and other clutter. 80's rock and welding. Day one of three off. Happy to have my welding setup back and running.
 
I've a longtime biker bud who would say he could weld wheat straw...never doubted him either.
 
I got another 10 minutes of free time between the kids weekend activities so I laid down a bead of 7018 on one side and 6013 on the other, just to keep working towards something decent (my second weekend of doing any welding). My question for you guys is what are you using to practice on that is easy to find and not crazy expensive? I cut a long formwork stake in half for this, but I only get about 16” of real welding before running out. Any creative ideas would be appreciated (and I continue to apologize for the look of my welds - if I can find some time to really dedicate to practicing I hope to start improving much more).

IMG_4656.jpegIMG_4657.jpeg
 
I got another 10 minutes of free time between the kids weekend activities so I laid down a bead of 7018 on one side and 6013 on the other, just to keep working towards something decent (my second weekend of doing any welding). My question for you guys is what are you using to practice on that is easy to find and not crazy expensive? I cut a long formwork stake in half for this, but I only get about 16” of real welding before running out. Any creative ideas would be appreciated (and I continue to apologize for the look of my welds - if I can find some time to really dedicate to practicing I hope to start improving much more).

View attachment 273921View attachment 273922
I don’t pretend to be good but I started on 2 6” pieces of flat stock and welded them flat. Then after they cooled I stuck it in a vice and tried to break it by hitting it with a hammer.

It taught me a lot of info on what I was doing. Once I got it looking good and they were strong I moved on to 90 degrees and corners.
 
If you just want to practice laying beads get a square -ish piece of plate and run stringer beads next to each other until you cover the plate. Run another set of beads 90* to the first ones. Repeat, repeat, repeat,,,,, any type weld procedure. Stick, MIG, Tig, aluminum etc. The end result will (should) be a relatively square block of weld. Try to do it with aluminum and not have it looks like a pyramid.
 
I got another 10 minutes of free time between the kids weekend activities so I laid down a bead of 7018 on one side and 6013 on the other, just to keep working towards something decent (my second weekend of doing any welding). My question for you guys is what are you using to practice on that is easy to find and not crazy expensive? I cut a long formwork stake in half for this, but I only get about 16” of real welding before running out. Any creative ideas would be appreciated (and I continue to apologize for the look of my welds - if I can find some time to really dedicate to practicing I hope to start improving much more).

View attachment 273921View attachment 273922
Turn your amps up.
 
Slowly but surely, coming together... It's been a few years since I last used the spool gun (Miller 150).

I forgot how high the temp has to be. I knew it was higher for aluminum though, the world stopped shaking when I dialed it up to 7 for 1/8". Then repetition on the project, better beads each run. Chit ones to begin. Haha!

View attachment 273328

View attachment 273329

View attachment 273330

Next to figure:
Hold to secure - Trying to stay from pins and bolt/nut type connection to lock the extension to the boat ladder.

How to frame the remainder - Intend to double the thickness of the boat step with the extension.
Still figuring how to connect the pivot point of the boat ladder to the extension.

I dig these hobby projects. Clears the mind of work and other clutter. 80's rock and welding. Day one of three off. Happy to have my welding setup back and running.
I used to run a spool gun inside aluminum dump beds quite a bit. I riveted a towel to my helmet to cover the back of my head so my ears would stop getting flash burns.
 
I got another 10 minutes of free time between the kids weekend activities so I laid down a bead of 7018 on one side and 6013 on the other, just to keep working towards something decent (my second weekend of doing any welding). My question for you guys is what are you using to practice on that is easy to find and not crazy expensive? I cut a long formwork stake in half for this, but I only get about 16” of real welding before running out. Any creative ideas would be appreciated (and I continue to apologize for the look of my welds - if I can find some time to really dedicate to practicing I hope to start improving much more).

View attachment 273921View attachment 273922
amps up and slow down a bit. You should be getting a nice oval puddle.
 
I used to run a spool gun inside aluminum dump beds quite a bit. I riveted a towel to my helmet to cover the back of my head so my ears would stop getting flash burns.
Bad memories,,,,I stick welded a 4x4x8 steel tank from the inside when I was young and dumb. Every square inch of exposed skin was burned.
 
I got another 10 minutes of free time between the kids weekend activities so I laid down a bead of 7018 on one side and 6013 on the other, just to keep working towards something decent (my second weekend of doing any welding). My question for you guys is what are you using to practice on that is easy to find and not crazy expensive? I cut a long formwork stake in half for this, but I only get about 16” of real welding before running out. Any creative ideas would be appreciated (and I continue to apologize for the look of my welds - if I can find some time to really dedicate to practicing I hope to start improving much more).
Dude its fine, your getting there. Stay in the weld a tad longer looks like your rushing it. They call em Whips but its just a short motion forward and back. Some really good YouTube videos out there demonstrating. It just takes practice.

Home depot sells some flat stock of 1/8 inch plates. handy thing for practicing. Practice in short 1 to 2 inch beads and get those mastered before you tackle long ones. From what I just saw I think you would benefit from that. Dont be in such a rush.
 
While stick welding, dont rush things.

While stick welding I do a little bit of a whip pause, whip pause, pushing my weld back over itself to get most of the junk to "boil out". It gets your material pre-heated a bit before you get there. But thats just me.

Not going for the "Stack of dimes look, but it does kinda create one and it avoids undercut pretty well.

Also, I am no expert, but I do know that those 7018 rods are a bear to use if they even sense moisture. I had to throw a whole box away not long ago. Got new rods and it was unreal the difference in using "fresh rods".
 
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