K5 Jess
1/2 ton status
Idk how its bs.
Then you've never welded out of position. Its not always possible to pull

Idk how its bs.

Then you've never welded out of position. Its not always possible to pull![]()

Cant push with flux core, its like stick welding.

If he told you you cant push while stick welding...
Then yes your instructor with 35 years expirience is wrong.![]()
all good man, i dont know everything about all processes. But Im damn good at the two processes I learned. 

OK, I see one problem. You are trying to Learn to weld, so quit trying to actually weld.
Grab a piece of thick steel, 1/4inch or thicker, grind off a spot down to shiny steel and hook the ground clamp on there good and tight so as to eliminate any ground problems.
Make sure the rest of the metal is fairly clean, then start running beads.
Don't worry about penetration or joining two pieces together, get the basics down first.
First get the bead right.
This involves learning what the puddle should look like, the proper holding angle and speed of travel, speed of the wire and how much heat.
Once you get a nice clean flatish bead, and can do it every time, then you can start worrying about penetration.
You can go down to about 1/4 inch, run a bead, and then cut it in half across the bead and look at the cross section to see how deep it penetrated.
You could do that with 1/2 inch, but it easier to cut the 1/4.
If the penetration looks good, grind off the edges of the cut at a bevel and then weld them back together.
Once you can get good reliable beads, and then join the thick stuff, then you can move to the thin stuff.
Flux core wire will deliver good strong welds. They just will not be as pretty, and if you push it too hard, you can get flux inclusions in the weld.
I keep several rolls of flux core around for use when I run out of gas and need something stuck right now.
And you will run out of gas at just the wrong time.......Especially if you forget to turn the bottle off when you are through welding.
I even rigged up an alarm for a friend of mine's shop. When he turns the welder off, a loud bell starts ringing, and can only be turned off by a momentary contact switch behind the valve of the gas bottles.
Since he has to reach past the valve to hit the button, he very seldom fails to turn off the gas.
I wanted to rig it so he had to turn off the valve to kill the bell, but never figured out a way.
The bottles were different each time he got a new one.

im definitely no welding expert, but i would play with your settings a little and watch the puddle more.
And what do you mean you cant see it?
And it looks like you are weaving back and forth with it...
Is it normal for the wire to hit the steel and burn off / break off in a couple pieces before it actually forms a puddle and gets hot?
absolutely not.. sounds like way too much wire speed..
If I am burning through should I turn up orbdown the wire speed?
burning thru is too hot..
OK, I see one problem. You are trying to Learn to weld, so quit trying to actually weld.
Grab a piece of thick steel, 1/4inch or thicker, grind off a spot down to shiny steel and hook the ground clamp on there good and tight so as to eliminate any ground problems.
Make sure the rest of the metal is fairly clean, then start running beads.
Don't worry about penetration or joining two pieces together, get the basics down first.
First get the bead right.
This involves learning what the puddle should look like, the proper holding angle and speed of travel, speed of the wire and how much heat.
Once you get a nice clean flatish bead, and can do it every time, then you can start worrying about penetration.
You can go down to about 1/4 inch, run a bead, and then cut it in half across the bead and look at the cross section to see how deep it penetrated.
You could do that with 1/2 inch, but it easier to cut the 1/4.
If the penetration looks good, grind off the edges of the cut at a bevel and then weld them back together.
Once you can get good reliable beads, and then join the thick stuff, then you can move to the thin stuff.
Flux core wire will deliver good strong welds. They just will not be as pretty, and if you push it too hard, you can get flux inclusions in the weld.
I keep several rolls of flux core around for use when I run out of gas and need something stuck right now.
And you will run out of gas at just the wrong time.......Especially if you forget to turn the bottle off when you are through welding.
I even rigged up an alarm for a friend of mine's shop. When he turns the welder off, a loud bell starts ringing, and can only be turned off by a momentary contact switch behind the valve of the gas bottles.
Since he has to reach past the valve to hit the button, he very seldom fails to turn off the gas.
I wanted to rig it so he had to turn off the valve to kill the bell, but never figured out a way.
The bottles were different each time he got a new one.