the aluminized is your biggest prob, clean it.. 23 is nice, but it's definitely doable with 30... too bad you don't have infinite adjustment...
the aluminized is your biggest prob, clean it.. 23 is nice, but it's definitely doable with 30... too bad you don't have infinite adjustment...

You could try using the .030 and grinding the aluminized coating off. The .023 might make the heat a little more tunable, but I do agree the coating is the majority of the problem.
Rene

I don't even think these bottles...20#??? (about 2' tall), have threads on them for a cap?
I got caps for my acetylene, and oxy bottles, but not this argon/CO2.
It is a PITA, because its another 15 mi. into town to get one.
First thing in the AM!
Also, I'm having a tough time getting a good bead on this 16ga. I'm using .030, should I go to .023?
I got the heat at "B" (A-E settings, not variable) and feed at 3 (1-10 variable)
The wire feed seems good, but if I turn down the heat it just rounds up the weld, if I turn it to C it blows a hole in it.
I gotta move it fast to keep from blowing a hole in it. It is aluminized new pipe, does that matter? Do I need to sand off the aluminized coating?
Easy to overlook. Same goes for the zinc coating on galvanized stuff. Not only is it noxious, but plays hell with the weld itself.
Clean shiny steel is your friend. Even millscale on mild steel should be cleaned off, although it's the least trouble to weld over.
One thing to try is to go hotter on the tap (more voltage) and crank the wire speed up. Sounds bass akwards huh? Try it and move faster, you might be very surprised at how hot you can weld on thinner stuff...
I've welded sheet steel (~14 gauge) with .045" wire, 26 volts and ~160 amps plenty. You gotta move though...but what you get is a very smooth weld, small profile, and great pen. There is no puddle manipulation with this method, you have more than enough heat that you certainly don't need to wash it in on either side. I prefer a 10-15 degree push angle (gun pointed ahead of the puddle)
For your exhaust I'd probably turn it up and do a series of overlapping tacks all the way around. The extra heat will ensure good penetration, and you're not gonna get any of the lumps and humps you'd otherwise get welding on round stuff like that.
Rene
some of my welding issues, some success, some failure, some frustration.
It ain't the prettiest,but its solid....amazing what a grinder and some paint can do for it....
I started out by aligning the pieces with a hose clamp, this works pretty good, tack em on the inside, then take off the clamp and make booger welds on the outside.
Some practice piece welding experimentation...these were all with .030 wire, and various amp/wire feeds.
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The weld on the left is from the maker of the flex pipe, mine is on the right
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I am loosing some sight on the joint sometimes Heath....I was wondering if my auto darkening lens is acting up? It darkens down, but sometimes when the arc sputters on the weld, the lens will get lighter, and then my eyes go "blind" momentarily from the flash, and lead me astray. Its a solar powered battery in it, is it just the sputtering of non continual weld, or should I change the battery?
And yeah the butt welds were a lot more challenging than the lap welds....