5X better design than the other two posted first.
and I know you guys may not be on the hardcore trails but you have to think about a potential rollover going 70mph down the highway too.
Way to bring us back to reality
5X better design than the other two posted first.
and I know you guys may not be on the hardcore trails but you have to think about a potential rollover going 70mph down the highway too.
Way to bring us back to reality
How important is it to put bushings between the cage and frame attachment?
Like I’ll still be taking the truck out for Sunday drives with the fam and using it on occasion for daily driving.
It’s already pretty loud to drive already. I’m assuming that vibration and noise are the concerns.
Got the welder hooked up and couldn’t resist trying to lay a bead. Played with the settings a bit and it laid down a nice one.
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I don't think it would be unbearable. Some people get a little drastic with their expectations on that kind of stuff. I honestly don't think you will notice that much more of a difference if you hard mount the cage, but to each their own.
And I second what @kgblazerfive said, you should probably do the sliders at the same time as the cage...or at least the sliders first, just my opinion though. Best advice I can give on a cage is take your time, don't be in a hurry, measure 3 times; bend/cut once, try not to have any empty nodes, and try to map out the design way before you start any work at all...then you will be fine.
That one pass looks alright...looks like the volts are pretty good for good penetration, but you could probably turn the wire speed down just a tad and let that tip dance on the metal. If you go too slow, you can get too large of a pool going and also the heat can get too much which can start to burn through the metal (which looks like it was starting to do on the right side of that bead). And also....clean, clean, and clean some more the area you are welding before you weld. Other than that, not bad for pulling the machine outta the box and seeing what it'll do. You are always going to be searching for the right setting, even while you are welding cause each situation is different with different thickness of metals and what not.
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Thanks for the advice and pointers