CK5
Register an account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members.

Welding Galvanized

stockk5

1/2 ton status
 Premium
Joined
Apr 13, 2004
Posts
2,304
Reaction score
415
Location
Cromwell, CT
Ok i have a 3/8th plate of steel that seems to be galvanized. How do i go about welding it without any ill effects? Do i just grind clean the area that i will be welding an a lil farther back or is it even possible without an acid soak? thanks guys!
 
Only thing I know is that when you weld it,,, it will put off some badass fumes.

I welded some handles to galvanized pipe one time to make a post driver.
 
Probably not the right way, but I just cleaned of where I was welding with a flapper and turn on a fan to blow the fumes away. I also only welded it outside.
 
Soak or clean the area you are welding in muratic acid, it will eat off the Galvanizing so you dont kill yourself.
 
hmmm yeah i was lookin round google for it.. im gonna prob just ditch this piece of steel and grab a regular one... haha dont feel like risking getting welders flu...
 
hmmm yeah i was lookin round google for it.. im gonna prob just ditch this piece of steel and grab a regular one... haha dont feel like risking getting welders flu...
get a good dust mask the ones we have at work are from 3M and say for welding fumes or to really be on the safe side get a respirator with charcoal and HEPA filters like used for spraypainting
 
i got sick one time from zinc poisoning from welding galvanized. if you do feel ill drink milk. I thought I was ventaleted enough but I had to weld a bunch of irrigation fittings and such and apparently not enough
 
yeah thats some bad stuff, I would probably just get some different non-galvinized steel.

Remington
 
You can weld galvanized but try not to breath it in. It is toxic. When I have welded it I have a fan blowing in a crosswind direction to help keep from breathing it in.

Harley
 
just a quick question, do I need a particulate filter of n95 rating, or an organic filter to protect against welding fumes?
 
yeah how useful is that? im going to the metal yard in a few to just avoid this whole trying not to get sick thing haha
 
I would just get something with a charcoal filter. If it protects again nuclear dust, it'll protect against some burnt galvanized. I like the idea of using muriatic acid first though. That stuff works great. You'll be fine if you have plenty of ventilation. I've welded on more galvanized steel than I care to remember and never got sick. Had my helmet all up in the smoke screen, but had good fans around me to not let it linger.
 
http://www.sperkoengineering.com/html/articles/WeldingGalvanized.pdf

Here is an article I searched and found a while back when I had to weld a fender on a galvanized boat trailer. It has useful info on breathers and restoring corrosion resistance.

I did it outside and had a fan on lo blowing the smoke away from me (but if you are using a shielding gas, this might not allow that to work properly). I also tried to only weld in short segments and walked away to let the smoke dissapate before coming back to weld another segment. I didn't drink milk (hadn't heard that one :)) and luckily didn't get sick either.
 
http://www.sperkoengineering.com/html/articles/WeldingGalvanized.pdf

Here is an article I searched and found a while back when I had to weld a fender on a galvanized boat trailer. It has useful info on breathers and restoring corrosion resistance.

I did it outside and had a fan on lo blowing the smoke away from me (but if you are using a shielding gas, this might not allow that to work properly). I also tried to only weld in short segments and walked away to let the smoke dissapate before coming back to weld another segment. I didn't drink milk (hadn't heard that one :)) and luckily didn't get sick either.

I read the whole thing, and here is what I got from it:
1. It may make you sick, but its limited in scope, and no long term effects. (some how I dont believe it totally, but whatever).
2. They list 3m part numbers that dont exist.
3. They dont talk about exactly what filtration level you need.

From what I can gather Zinc fumes is actually vaporized zinc- and as such is more like a fine dust particle, than vapor. By that I mean, cannot be filtered out by mechanical means alone. This article leads me to believe that a n95 or higher rated mask with a good seal iis adequate, and that the carbon ones are not necessary for zinc fumes, but can reduce the other welding fumes which actually are vapors.

Someone please comment, I hope I read it correctly.
 

Latest Posts

Top Bottom