discomikey100
New Member
- Messages
- 3
- Location
- Derbyshire, UK
Hi all,
New to the site but certainly not to welding, although I often find myself asking the same question,
When welding up a chassis for example, there are often certain areas where there is an overlap of 2 layers of steel, and you're trying to weld to that area. Sometimes (quite often actually) when welding to these areas i end up with the weld spitting back and becoming porous. Is this due to contamination within the steel? it doesn't seem to matter how clean I get the surface that i am actually welding to. Is there any way to avoid this?
New to the site but certainly not to welding, although I often find myself asking the same question,
When welding up a chassis for example, there are often certain areas where there is an overlap of 2 layers of steel, and you're trying to weld to that area. Sometimes (quite often actually) when welding to these areas i end up with the weld spitting back and becoming porous. Is this due to contamination within the steel? it doesn't seem to matter how clean I get the surface that i am actually welding to. Is there any way to avoid this?