The patch panels will never line up perfectly, At least mine didn’t. That’s the hardest part, if I would have fit them better before welding them up, it would have been much easier. that and the TIG welder so you don’t have to grind so much.You are at the same point I am
Its just my patch panels don't form up to meet the inner bedside
Great work on documenting, I could use all the help I can find
I was actually looking for videos to help avoid hand shaking. I discovered that the steadier I try to hold my hand, the shakier it gets. So now I just try and relax it and not squeeze the torch with my fingers. It helps a lot, but I got plenty of other issues to overcome. Aluminum is nothing like steel.That is the one thing I wish I had taken classes for. Bad habits sink in quickly. When I was learning, there were not videos on the internet to watch. I shake too much now to do thin material now.
True.I was actually looking for videos to help avoid hand shaking. I discovered that the steadier I try to hold my hand, the shakier it gets. So now I just try and relax it and not squeeze the torch with my fingers. It helps a lot, but I got plenty of other issues to overcome. Aluminum is nothing like steel.
Ha! They better work out, I could have fabbed them myself for 1/4 of what they cost. If anyone knows a pool plaster contractor in the area, I can write a check to get started today.I am waiting to see how those pool anchors work out with the epoxy….
Swim season is already here. Tick-tock!!
-G

I’ve found that I can’t weld over 120A without popping the breaker so I need to upgrade my electrical panel or buy another house to really weld 1/4” steel.
I will plead ignorance, what is that?Small pic of my welding practice. I’ve built 11 of these so far (inadvertent YouTube channel requests) and each one looks nicer than the previous so getting better. Ive been frustrated that my tungsten wears out too fast and discovered most of the wear was coming from running too many amps through the 3/32 so once I bumped up to 5/32 it doesn’t decompose as easy at 120A
I’ve found that I can’t weld over 120A without popping the breaker so I need to upgrade my electrical panel or buy another house to really weld 1/4” steel.
View attachment 451971
View attachment 451972
Got some more fender work coming soon.
Small pic of my welding practice. I’ve built 11 of these so far (inadvertent YouTube channel requests) and each one looks nicer than the previous so getting better. Ive been frustrated that my tungsten wears out too fast and discovered most of the wear was coming from running too many amps through the 3/32 so once I bumped up to 5/32 it doesn’t decompose as easy at 120A
I’ve found that I can’t weld over 120A without popping the breaker so I need to upgrade my electrical panel or buy another house to really weld 1/4” steel.
View attachment 451971
View attachment 451972
Got some more fender work coming soon.
It’s a concrete lifting tool kinda like a railroad jack. You can hammer it into the ground under a slab and then put a hydraulic jack under it to lift the edge of the slab back to level. I posted a video of it a while back and people have been asking me to build them one so I found a laser cutter and have been using that for welding practice. Still a little in the hole money-wise but close to broke even.I will plead ignorance, what is that?
That may be one of my issues! I can get real bad hand shakes so I do tend to keep longer electrode distance. I also found my ground strap has over-heated and I wonder if that’s why. I’ve watched all of Dusty’s (Pacific Arc TIG) tutorials on hand placement and I have a hard time not using my wrist as a pivot, even though I know it’s not ideal. Maybe I need to reset my thinking and start from scratch. Id really like to get better.Brian, I weld with a 3/32” tungsten at 200A all the time. I am suspicious that the problem lies elsewhere. Keep a close eye on your distance from the part… coming from MIG you are probably accustomed to having that nozzle WAY back from your weld. With TIG the gap between the tip of the tungsten and the weld pool is maybe 1/16”!!! (Which is why it’s so difficult not to dip the tungsten when your are floating your torch hand). If you are too far away, the arc length is huge and it will take forever to get a puddle initiated… and will probably beat the crap out of your tungsten with all the arc-wander. Find a way to rest your hand so that its super comfortable and you can slide it easily at a 1/16” distance… my guess is that a lot of your current issues will resolve themselves. Keep at it, don’t give up!!!
-G
No, hired it out. There’s a place over in the direction of middlebrook pike that’s reasonable. If you ever need something like that I can send the info.Did you buy a laser cutter?