TFS: Extreme Cope Challenge (watch me get humbled)

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  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2024
  • Looking to step up your tube welding skills? The Extreme Cope Challenge from Weld Metals Online is a great way to learn, practice, and even keep up with your current tube welding skills. In this video, Justin takes on the challenge completely raw and unrehearsed to show you just how challenging it can be!
    Buy the Extreme Cope Challenge HERE!
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    #TIGTubing #WeldMetalsOnline #ExtremeCopeChallenge

Komentáře • 228

  • @TheFabricatorSeries
    @TheFabricatorSeries  Před 5 lety +3

    Buy the Extreme Cope Challenge HERE!
    weldmetalsonline.com/collections/tube-coupons/products/extreme-tube-notch-kit
    Learn the Extreme Cope in our TIG Tubing Class!
    thefabricatorseries.com/classes
    Tools & Gear We Use and Recommend
    www.amazon.com/shop/thefabricationseries

    • @antonylowick231
      @antonylowick231 Před 5 lety

      Do you think you could put one side near a wall with a mirror as paractice and explain it. Just to show the crap you have go to on job site's and a worst case scenario. Great video and your awesome i really want to try this just wondering if you ship worldwide

    • @colbygrapov1239
      @colbygrapov1239 Před 5 lety

      yo Justin you should use the primeweld tig225 more often in your vids

    • @willhall7777
      @willhall7777 Před 3 lety

      Just noticed your torch at 27 mins in... Where do I get one of those??? Looks super handy!!!

    • @somd_lftd_hoe8074
      @somd_lftd_hoe8074 Před 2 lety

      Have to tried the ahp alphatig 203?? I'm debating between that or the primeweld 225x

  • @mrmidnight32
    @mrmidnight32 Před 5 lety +57

    You make me feel so much better about my trademarked tungsten dipping technique I’ve perfected over the last 6 months of welding 😂😭😩

    • @TomMakeHere
      @TomMakeHere Před 5 lety +8

      Yeah I must get confused with stick welding with the amount that I dip my electrode!

    • @416cubes4
      @416cubes4 Před 5 lety +7

      nothing's more annoying than looking down and asking yourself didn't I just sharpen all 10 of those 5 minutest ago?

    • @MustardActual
      @MustardActual Před 5 lety +1

      Story of my life man😂

    • @dennisleadbetter7721
      @dennisleadbetter7721 Před 3 lety

      I agree, I feel so much better, but I don't think I could do the contortionist act of the century and only dip 7 tungstens.

  • @adrianm5147
    @adrianm5147 Před 5 lety +12

    Thank you for not doing a practice piece beforehand. This is a small insight on true welding "in the field". One thing is on a bench and another thing is welding upside down in 100 degree weather. You kept it real, mad respect.

  • @arcdragon6906
    @arcdragon6906 Před 5 lety +24

    Thanks for sharing! So glad you have the balls to show everyone something that isn't 100% perfect. Definitely helps moderate my current aspirations back towards reality.

  • @dereckbauer2613
    @dereckbauer2613 Před 5 lety +33

    Damn & I was feeling bad about how often I have to regrind/replace tungstens, THANKS for that!!

    • @icyuranus404
      @icyuranus404 Před 5 lety +4

      "welding" is just a name used to disguise the real task: grinding

    • @gabewhisen3446
      @gabewhisen3446 Před 4 lety

      @@icyuranus404 if your really good like me throw in some Bondo and paint to that list

  • @anetworkservice
    @anetworkservice Před 5 lety +9

    Nicely done. I bought this kit for practice before rollbar welding. I haven't opened it yet. Also; I'm glad you didn't practice first. That helps the rest of us aspiring welders feel better.

  • @skeeterdirks3992
    @skeeterdirks3992 Před 5 lety +2

    I like how real you are Justin. No excuses no bull!! And very informative on everything you do. Excellent content. For beginner tig welders like me this is all very good info and I thank you for that.

  • @johanjotun1647
    @johanjotun1647 Před 4 lety +2

    just you Justin, your the only one who can instruct/talk while they do it thanks for the content love the channel.

  • @autoSRI
    @autoSRI Před 5 lety +12

    That looks way harder than it first appears
    Nice to see your not afraid to show your mistakes

    • @icyuranus404
      @icyuranus404 Před 5 lety +2

      you+are=you're
      nice to see that not afraid to show mistakes

    • @robertsample42
      @robertsample42 Před 5 lety

      Icy Uranus :DILLIGAF!!!

    • @icyuranus404
      @icyuranus404 Před 5 lety

      @@robertsample42 ur mom must think highly of you

  • @Titantramp4u
    @Titantramp4u Před 5 lety +1

    Back in the 80's I was working for a desert racer named John Baker and was just learning high end fabrication including TIG welding. John needed a TIG welder and was interviewing quite a few all week...they all layed down good solid TIG welds on the bench, but just about everyone failed when the had to weld on the actual race car in all the off hand positions that came up. Bench - ok, Tube frame - not so well....Where I learned that you need to be able to weld in all sorts of crazy places...

  • @416cubes4
    @416cubes4 Před 5 lety +3

    Sweet, looks great🤘 Appreciation for sharing your thoughts as your at it.. The little things you mention as your burning through it are all things I will be more observant of. All details that can only come from experience. For those of us who have a lack of that (experience) learning from yours, absolutely helps speed up our learning curve. I've been swinging a hammer/remodeling/building for 17 years. Finally, over the past couple years I'm able to make the time and now have the space/tools to create via a new medium, metal. I'm getting board with wood. Lol. Love your series, it really is helping me progress faster than I would have otherwise. I don't have time or money for school, this is as good as it gets for a guy like me! Always looking forward to your next video. Thx!

  • @carlpimblett8628
    @carlpimblett8628 Před 8 měsíci

    I have the greatest respect for you on this one for being both Honest and Brave for performing this exam piece in front of the world (and probably your old welding school teacher).

  • @JO.Racing
    @JO.Racing Před 5 lety +4

    It’s nice to see the mistakes on CZcams, often times we only see the best of the welds and not knowing how may outtakes the person did to get that perfect bead. Basically it’s nice to see that you sometimes suck as much as we do at home in our own workshops. Lol

    • @TheFabricatorSeries
      @TheFabricatorSeries  Před 5 lety +4

      19 years of practice only to find out I'm still human.

    • @JO.Racing
      @JO.Racing Před 5 lety

      The Fabrication Series love you’re work man, I’ve watched multiple video you’ve posted and probably watched the cage build series 3-4 times when building my roll cage on our time trials car. Seeing you dip the tungsten a few times made me feel alittle better about my welding ability. Lol

  • @samla2404
    @samla2404 Před 2 lety +1

    Solid work and thanks man for showing not only skills but effort to demonstrate the piece.

  • @rdb8509
    @rdb8509 Před 4 lety +1

    That is reality for me. So thanks for doing that. I weld about 2x a year so this helps reinforce that I need to practice a lot more. Great channel!

  • @k0rndog93
    @k0rndog93 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm a bit late to this party, but it seems like 30 people ran out of Tungsten before they finished the challenge lol.. But I've been watching your channel alot lately, really dig the content!! I'm only a beginner right now (Started like 3 months ago) and have learned a lot from your vids. It's super rad that you show your mistakes!! It keeps me motivated seeing professionals make mistakes! It can be discouraging to watch some channels that only show the perfect stuff.

  • @vili8893
    @vili8893 Před rokem

    You spirit is contagious, i'm all hyped too when u started.

  • @gsh319
    @gsh319 Před 5 lety

    ...and if we wanna add just a bit more of challenge to this exercise, my cameraman is gonna jab a pointed stick in my right eye...which......he first rolled in salt!.... remember no cheating! Great work Justin. Thank You for all your valuable lessons my friend

  • @tgsubie
    @tgsubie Před 4 lety +1

    Dude, i absolutely love your channel. You have taught me so much and ive had fun just watching and learning from you. Thank you for the valuable information you provide to make the world of fabrication a better place. I laughed a lot during this one lol. But still glad to watch and learn.

  • @dereckbauer2613
    @dereckbauer2613 Před 5 lety +5

    LOVE watching your vids, serious sense of humor

  • @fredblair4307
    @fredblair4307 Před 5 lety +2

    i pretty much watch all the welding videos for one reason many years ago back in England when I was a young man i was a welder i welded high pressure hydraulic elbows for a company called hi flex in Salisbury wilts uk from there i graduated to working on the early mini coopers for a company called downton engineering in Wiltshire southern England making inlet and exhaust manifolds from there to fabricating fuselage for various aircraft all this was done with gas welding idid just a little tig but it was nothing like today's machines it was a monster water cooled very heavy torch big heavy rubber hoses im looking at buying a new multi purpose machine and thanks to your review its going to be the fronius transteel 2200 as i plan on building a lutus seven clone as i worked for colin Chapman on couple of early versions of the lotus seven and promised myself one day id have one

  • @abarry48
    @abarry48 Před 5 lety +1

    Definitely gunna have to get one to try out, I’m just a self taught and your videos helped a ton with learning. Hopefully I can stick one together

  • @Metal2Venom
    @Metal2Venom Před 5 lety +1

    Awesome work was good seeing hole video see the different angles can get in, just wish had guy like you in UK to teach tig would be there in a heartbeat hard learning from videos

  • @RicardoGarcia-104
    @RicardoGarcia-104 Před 2 lety

    Love the struggle. Sometimes you definitely make it look so easy. Thankx for the video

  • @skoue4165
    @skoue4165 Před 5 lety +4

    Love the tungsten count. Mine would have been a lot higher!

  • @fullboostturbo1
    @fullboostturbo1 Před 5 lety +2

    Great Vid mate, I always comment on Welds I see on youtube reason being I used to be a welder some 13 years ago and just a can't help myself lol.
    I used to lay some really decent mild/stainless steel and Aluminum tig welds, I was a welder/boilermaker for some 22 years, I used to take great pride in all my welds often getting comments off other welders, on how perfectly uniform they all looked.
    I have never had a job come back due to failure of any kind from any of my welds, at any time throughout my welding career which I am totally proud of.
    But I do often think to myself, here I am making fun of other peoples welds yet I have not really done any decent welding for 13 years, so I bet my welds would be dam shitty to start off with again maybe on par with a beginner, at least for the first few welds anyway.
    One thing which is like riding a bicycle, you should never really forget how to make a welding machine purr so to speak, by adjusting everything correctly whether it be Mig, Tig, or just the correct amps/polarity for stick welding.
    Keep up the great vid's of you actually being a human, and making mistakes every now and again.

  • @chrisduncan2626
    @chrisduncan2626 Před 4 lety

    An older guy i work with always said "you give me perfect conditions, ill give you a perfect weld. Therefore you do what you can to get it done" lol i do enjoy doing stuff static sometimes (mainly build pressure vessels and condensors). I may have to order this and give it a go. I always tell people those 6g pipe welds are a cakewalk compared to stuff like this in the real world where theres crap in your way all the time

    • @paulhancock3844
      @paulhancock3844 Před 3 lety +2

      My instructor always told me off for trying to move items to the perfect position. Said they don't tip ships over so People like you can weld, make it work with what you have

  • @MonkeyTron69
    @MonkeyTron69 Před 5 lety +1

    This video inspired me to want to learn how to weld, I'll be watching that video next. Thank you, Great job. 👍 That looked complicated and fun.

  • @vinnbrock
    @vinnbrock Před 5 lety +5

    Wow. Another great video. Thank you for showing it in a single take format and being honest about the tungstens. I'm saving up for a tig rig, and it's refreshing to see that a bad@ss like you dips the tip (just the tip). Wish I could give it more than one thumbs up.

  • @seanwolfe9321
    @seanwolfe9321 Před 5 lety

    Good God Justin....if I could have pulled that thing off the stand or at least rotated it...it would have just been hard. This was a monster even with your face to face help. I highly recommend anyone wanting to learn tube/roll cage etc welding to go to your link for weldmetalsonline. It starts out fun...until your shoulders and arms start getting fatigue! Nice, right fits on those coping cuts...gonna give it another try soon (in my shop this time...)

  • @scottH18370
    @scottH18370 Před 4 lety +1

    Making me really look forward to building my new airboat cage

  • @dcrahn
    @dcrahn Před 5 lety +2

    For real world test each of those tubes should be about 3 or 4 feet long. The short tubes made it easy for you to maneuver around.

  • @daveettel4750
    @daveettel4750 Před 4 lety +1

    My back hurts just watching this lol. Thanks for all the great info I really appreciate it

    • @superkillr
      @superkillr Před 3 lety

      No joke. Keep your body in some off crooked hold for even 30 seconds could sideline me now.

  • @maximfadeev2012
    @maximfadeev2012 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for true video! Did not expect that you spent so many tungstens!!!

  • @kf8575
    @kf8575 Před 5 lety +11

    Why people use footpedals for things like this really is beyond me. Thumbutton and either lift or HF start for me, on everything other than aluminium

    • @evanchi9460
      @evanchi9460 Před 5 lety +3

      Being a foot pedal guy my whole career, it is really difficult for me to maintain total precision while trying to manipulate a button or wheel on the torch. Probably just haven't messed with them enough to get good enough at it.

    • @adrianm5147
      @adrianm5147 Před 5 lety +4

      Remember: It doesn't matter how you do it as long as you get the correct results.

    • @XPFanatix
      @XPFanatix Před 4 lety

      I learned to Tig with the thumb button. I can see the benefit of using a pedal if your sitting down but must be hard while standing.

    • @raulduke85
      @raulduke85 Před 4 lety

      I used 4t mode and buttons with job mode for the past 2 years (you can switch between saved jobs while you weld) on aluminum; also in my factory we free handed everything, even in position and for free handing I mean that we used our bare hands with no chance to put the pal anywhere. It's a bit difficult at first, but it's much faster and you get so much confident when you learn.

    • @raulduke85
      @raulduke85 Před 4 lety

      @@evanchi9460 it's easy, you can also emulate the foot pedal pulsing; set 2t, and a downslope ramp about 4 seconds; you set a current a bit high, then you just push the button, the puddle starts fast cause you have amp set too high, then you dab, release the button, now you got downslope current, when you see your puddle is ready you press again and you get again the peak current and you go for another dab. Sounds slow, but it's not, depends on how fast you are. It's an easy way to start with button and cosmetic result is pretty nice, you have nice dimes in every material.
      Generally i use this method on thin sheet metal, 1mm or thinner but it works also till 3 mm i'd say (u don't really need on 3mm but you control heat transfer and distortion so much better).
      Beyond 3 mm it's not worth to be used

  • @melgross
    @melgross Před 5 lety +6

    Do you ever watch your own videos (after you edit them, that is?) because on this one, you’re positively manic. ;~}

  • @rickyburton4642
    @rickyburton4642 Před 5 lety +1

    Justin, that was great! And I didn’t see any leaks at all!😃👍👍🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸👌lol!

  • @jimzivny1554
    @jimzivny1554 Před 4 lety +1

    Great video, very interesting listening to your thoughts as you went along.

  • @johnthomas8605
    @johnthomas8605 Před 5 lety

    Try it with GMAW .030 ER70S6. I just welded up a prototype piece for a military client using 2" .095 chrome moly tube with a number of extreme coped joints. It was humbling as I has gotten used to just running straight 2, 3, and 4 F and G type joints on plate and some square stock (we have used very little round stock due to what we build). I'm goping to get a TIG welder this fall and go back through all your coping and tube fabing and welding vids and get my skills back up in those areas.

  • @FrankRuiz66
    @FrankRuiz66 Před rokem

    That was awesome sauce to watch.. Well done dudw👍👍

  • @ALurkingCamper
    @ALurkingCamper Před 4 lety

    I really like watching these videos. It’s good entertainment. Thank you.

  • @rhb8663
    @rhb8663 Před 2 lety

    Hey. I can dip loads more tungstens than that. I can also stuff the rod into it. That was a surprise the first time I did it!!

  • @kmcwhq
    @kmcwhq Před 5 lety +4

    What happened to the AHP welder comparison video?

  • @charliecyr5482
    @charliecyr5482 Před 2 lety

    Should of had a last tube coming straight down on top 😁 very nice job

  • @BigDave71
    @BigDave71 Před 4 lety

    I find this so interesting. I should have been a welder or at least tried. I bajad no guidance when I graduated high school. Should have followed my heart. There were too many negative people around me. Thank goodness they are now far away from me. 😆

  • @thomwood8768
    @thomwood8768 Před 5 lety +1

    Great job on the cope challenge. Love your channel and have learned a lot from it. I do have a question. I noticed in previous videos that you have a porter cable band saw. I was wondering how you slowed down the speed to be able to cut steel with that saw. I have the same one but trying not to change the motor out. I am hoping you could answer this question. Keep up the good job on the videos.

  • @DieselRamcharger
    @DieselRamcharger Před 5 lety +1

    i can absolutely do better. thats a standard chassis node. looks terrible too. theres a huge difference between table welders (easy) and chassis fabricators who do everything out of position. when you get real good at chassis work you'll realize you can setup your cup and stick out to prevent dragging in the puddle. i also wear a mig glove on my torch hand. you only need feel for feeding the wire.

  • @DynamicViper771
    @DynamicViper771 Před 3 lety +1

    im just learning to TIG, this would own me but eh i would so try it

  • @djack1948
    @djack1948 Před 3 lety

    Hey Justin, Try the 'Tig Finger' work great for those hot spots.

  • @jamessonger3
    @jamessonger3 Před 5 lety

    Damn bro I hope those are not some knockoff Tig Fingers..... you, me and everyone else in this community should support Jody by using his Tig Fingers.... That's just how I feel because of what he's done for me and taught me with his videos....

    • @TheFabricatorSeries
      @TheFabricatorSeries  Před 5 lety +1

      It's a spark plug heat shield boot thingy. My TIG fingers were missing the day of the shoot (I suspect they stayed on someone else's finger since I still havent found them). Gotta improvise.

  • @jayspain
    @jayspain Před 4 lety

    Thanks it is informative, I'd have liked you to include 45 degree cuts. My abrasive chop saw is pretty useless at them. I won't mention the make as I think its down to wobbly cutter rather than make.

  • @prozeke07
    @prozeke07 Před 4 lety

    Really appreciated the real time errors in the exercise. Let's us commoners realize we aren't that far off.

  • @darylt57
    @darylt57 Před 5 lety

    Awesome video! going to try this when i get better.

  • @fredblair4307
    @fredblair4307 Před 5 lety +2

    be very careful what you wish for you just might get it and be made to look just a little bit to cocky lol im just teasing you because I watch all your videos that i can find

    • @TheFabricatorSeries
      @TheFabricatorSeries  Před 5 lety +3

      I recall editing this vid and think "Wow, I sound like an ass in that intro." But I meant it to encourage others to try it out and hope others can do way better than I did 🤣

  • @4speed3pedals
    @4speed3pedals Před 5 lety +1

    Why do all the online videos talk about 'heat affected zones' and no explain why it is detrimental? I used to weld steel with a gs torch and the heat affected zone was not small and my welds never failed. Stainless, 4130, 1018, aluminum all have different characteristics and heat will do different things.. I can understand S/S and 4130, not the rest. Isn't it time someone addressed the "issue" via video if it is an issue. Not all of us went to welding school.

  • @tjf1531
    @tjf1531 Před 5 lety

    Always appreciate real world work. Great job sir

  • @FordMan-lf8ns
    @FordMan-lf8ns Před 5 lety

    nice work and very informative I haven't tigged in yrs but taught 2 of our younger peeps in the shop so now they do it all so i'm out of practice big time!!!!

  • @AlisonWheeler
    @AlisonWheeler Před 5 lety +1

    It's sorta good to know experts tag their tungsten too.

  • @inklipMedia
    @inklipMedia Před 8 měsíci

    Why is it important to run all in a particular direction around the joints? Is it a matter of always building from the weld that's already started, rather than ending on an already-welded place?

  • @mopar92
    @mopar92 Před 5 lety

    One definitely sees why all commercially built chassis are mig welded. This is some hard stuff. My back hurts watching it. Good job.

    • @kf8575
      @kf8575 Před 5 lety

      Theyre probably mig welded by commercial suppliers for one simple reason.... Money.
      Tig welding a roll cage will have a higher manufacturing cost;
      more expensive gas and consumables, will take longer to fabricate (properly, ie all joints being cleaned and with an accurate fit-up) and if they're Mig welded, then the company only has to hire in semi-skilled staff giving lower wage bills each month.

    • @mopar92
      @mopar92 Před 5 lety +2

      Ken F I wouldn’t say a nascar team is cheaping out. All the nascar stuff is migged. Even aircraft that are tube fuselages are migged now.

  • @labcraft4934
    @labcraft4934 Před 5 lety +1

    Hey Justin, great video. Honest work. But how do you not get ray burns from bare arms??? I always get fried!

  • @harleyjune1233
    @harleyjune1233 Před 3 lety

    apologies i do not have sound or captions - is rotating work just off the table for this video - i work to always try to minimize these out of position welds - that has not been an exercise we do - trying to contort our body - I have a roll cage that they want tigged - they like the look - and that will be all out of position like this. - i have procastinated a long while on this project....

  • @andyp2001
    @andyp2001 Před 5 lety +1

    You should invest in a Tig Finger from Jody!

    • @TheFabricatorSeries
      @TheFabricatorSeries  Před 5 lety +1

      I used to buy them often, but they kept staying on other people's fingers in the classes. So I switched to spark plug heat shields. I cant even gives these away 🤣

  • @daos3300
    @daos3300 Před 5 lety +1

    great stuff, one of your best.

  • @user-uv3vm2hp4s
    @user-uv3vm2hp4s Před 5 měsíci

    “ you wanna switch roles”. Tig welding does require a skill, that is easily learned, but at the end of the day, photographers and videographers get payed way more.

    • @TheFabricatorSeries
      @TheFabricatorSeries  Před 5 měsíci

      Payed?
      I've seen your other comments about how much you don't like me now. It's OK. I can handle it... especially since I get paid every time you let me know. Negativity always pays more.

  • @davidoliver2826
    @davidoliver2826 Před 3 lety

    As I have said before, I like that you keep it real. Just purchased my Prime Weld machine and excited to get started. My question is, how do you know how much pedal, when to mash it and when to back off? Thanks Justin.

  • @lindseylucciannio9244
    @lindseylucciannio9244 Před 4 lety

    Love the fact you show that your human like the rest of us

  • @user-yd9qf2ct4g
    @user-yd9qf2ct4g Před rokem

    Good work 👍

  • @rafatrill
    @rafatrill Před 5 lety +2

    I want to see another welder do this I triple dog dare u to call someone out lol

  • @chuckpyle1624
    @chuckpyle1624 Před 5 lety

    Awesome job

  • @overbuiltautomotive1299
    @overbuiltautomotive1299 Před 5 lety +1

    lol i going to try this for my first tig peace man why not be fun

    • @icyuranus404
      @icyuranus404 Před 5 lety

      just put the one thing on the other thing and there you go

  • @chriswhite6882
    @chriswhite6882 Před 5 lety +2

    that made my back hurt just watching bro good stuff tho!

  • @tonybush2
    @tonybush2 Před 5 lety +2

    Did you notice if as you got more weld done the quality of the welds got better?

  • @h-j.k.8971
    @h-j.k.8971 Před 3 lety

    admirable...

  • @1tarbaby1
    @1tarbaby1 Před 3 lety

    more power to you man that was awesome
    Cheers

  • @Xphinity
    @Xphinity Před rokem

    I am new here, but why not bring it lower and use a chair with adjustable height? I am no welder either, I plan to learn from you and my Father. I like to work comfortably though if it's possible

  • @Jason-ms4gb
    @Jason-ms4gb Před 5 lety

    Didn't catch if there was a time limit for the challenge. Seemed you were really hyped up about it.

  • @michaelhale4041
    @michaelhale4041 Před 4 lety

    Maybe a little less red bull before lunch lol just joking.

  • @lovintrump5755
    @lovintrump5755 Před 5 lety +2

    DUDE AFTER ALL THE PREACHING ABOUT CLEAN METAL PREP, YOU GO AND START WELDING RIGHT OUT THE BAG !

    • @captainmoist590
      @captainmoist590 Před 5 lety +1

      because it comes clean, they clean it before they ship so its ready to weld out of the bag

    • @legionofanon
      @legionofanon Před 5 lety

      @@captainmoist590 Treat it like a gun? you dont *know* its clean, so clean it yourself? (treat a gun like its loaded)

  • @TrojanHorse1959
    @TrojanHorse1959 Před 5 lety

    Great video and challenge, thanks!

  • @daveticehurst4191
    @daveticehurst4191 Před 5 lety

    Did not see you clean the metal before you started to weld.

  • @gavinalmeida1994
    @gavinalmeida1994 Před 5 lety +1

    Wow 😲

  • @keithjurena9319
    @keithjurena9319 Před 2 lety

    Try 3/4" tube. At far more acute angles.

  • @dean6662009
    @dean6662009 Před rokem

    Could you do a video on gasless tig please

  • @kf8575
    @kf8575 Před 5 lety

    Sorry bud, @2.45 ...... failed before you even started 😕 didnt clean of the oxides left from the laser cutting, nor wipe off the oils on the tubes to stop any corrosion whilst in storage or transport.....
    Just kidding, good job with that, some bits like that are so awkward its a real PITA 😁

  • @crlrcksn
    @crlrcksn Před 3 lety

    Did you NOT burn your arms wearing short sleeves the entire time??

  • @BigDave71
    @BigDave71 Před 4 lety

    Awesome video. Thank you

  • @carbocycle
    @carbocycle Před 5 lety

    If you were doing a roll cage and you touched the tunsten that often, would you need to clean the welds out and start over?

  • @HTHCLLC
    @HTHCLLC Před 5 lety

    I understand the challenge. Hats off to you mate, Question : Real world, Does it mater if all welds go the same direction on a true roll cage. Seems real life says it would be stronger and better if not held to that rule. Comfort makes the weld. I am going to assume this is "Only" for the challenge.

    • @TheFabricatorSeries
      @TheFabricatorSeries  Před 5 lety

      Makes no difference as long as you dont change direction every time you light up the torch. It's just a challenge.

  • @rickdefalco1676
    @rickdefalco1676 Před 3 lety

    what are the green things on your fingers for heat protection? where can you get them?
    Thanks for the Vid.

  • @christiankultz5735
    @christiankultz5735 Před 5 lety

    Can you do this again with longer tubes? May be 1 or two meters? 😎

  • @gazzabowers1184
    @gazzabowers1184 Před 4 lety

    Awesome welding mask. KR Gaz

  • @jvh3253
    @jvh3253 Před 5 lety +1

    I started welding tig with a cheap matweld arc 200 welder 2 months ago... it be very intresting to see how I do hahaha

  • @aaronanderson7619
    @aaronanderson7619 Před 4 lety

    I took that missing dab...
    And 3 more, I'm not sorry...
    Sleepy maybe.

  • @michaelphillips7983
    @michaelphillips7983 Před 5 lety +1

    That looked ruff, would like to know how long it really took, or was that real time?

    • @TheFabricatorSeries
      @TheFabricatorSeries  Před 5 lety +1

      Total footage was about 49 minutes. Everything is real time and "as is"

  • @benc8386
    @benc8386 Před 5 lety

    Nicely done. So is it better to weld all the way around one tube (like you did in this video) before putting the second one over the top of it? That way you get more weld in there but lose some fit-up tightness because the second tube is sitting on top of the welds from the first one. Bike frames (0.030 wall or thereabouts) are usually done the other way-- tack the whole thing up and just weld everything you can now see.

    • @emertwall9427
      @emertwall9427 Před 5 lety +1

      Im pretty sure that would be dangerous always weld all the way around the tube even if your going to intersect another tube there

  • @mikecrawford715
    @mikecrawford715 Před 2 lety

    I have tried over and over and can not tig weld standing up.Has to be on a bench for me.

  • @tallyman15
    @tallyman15 Před rokem

    Cool

  • @richardschofield2201
    @richardschofield2201 Před 5 lety

    This is great. However,
    The challenge should state a fixed head #26 torch should be used.
    That would make you sweat

  • @maggitmaster
    @maggitmaster Před 5 lety

    I couldn't even come close with tig, but if mig is aloud then I could give your tig welds a run for your money.