From http://www.kevincaron.com – Artist Kevin Caron answers a frequent question: how do you keep your work from warping when welding? The answer may surprise you ….
Viewers tell Caron that they are trying to weld a corner or weld something to a flat plate and the metal warps. They ask, “How do you keep the metal from warping?”
If you are trying to weld a 45 degree angle, Caron recommends a 45 degree metal clamp. The one he uses is from Bessey, a German company. It’s good and heavy. Put your metal in the clamp, true it up, and tighten the clamp. Now you are ready to weld.
What do you do if you don’t have a clamp or any way to jig up the metal? If you’re welding on a metal work table, weld your work TO the table! You don’t need much of a tack to do the job. Caron shows a piece of square tubing and shows that you only need about three or four 1/4″ or 3/8″ tack welds to hold it. You don’t want to weld the whole thing because you’ll need to cut those tacks loose. But those little tack welds are enough to make sure your work isn’t going anywhere!
Clamping the metal to the workbench doesn’t work – you just can’t clamp it hard enough. The work wants to move when you put heat to it as you’re welding.
If you’re starting with a couple of 45 degree angles, whether you cut them on a horizontal bandsaw, a chopsaw or use a framing square and a scribe – not a pencil, chalk or other marker – with a single straight line, you’re going to get a nice straight, true cut.
But how are you going to make the upright section of metal from moving? Get a piece of scrap metal, cut two 45 degrees on it, and place it in the elbow of your L-shape. Tack it on each end to keep the metal from warping backward or forward. Now take another piece of scrap and tack it on the outside, top and bottom, perpendicular to your L-shape. Now it can’t go side to side, either.
It’s time to weld your joint. Weld the four corners and across the top, across both sides. Now your joint is solid and you can cut off the braces, cut off your spot welds, pull the piece off your welding table, and weld the sections you couldn’t get to. Everything is now straight and smooth.
The same is true if you’re welding plate metal. Spot weld it to your workbench. Put the piece on you want to weld. If it’s a leg, for example, you can’s just weld the four corners to the plate. It’s going to warp; it’s going to move. Once again, use your scrap metal as braces at perpendicular angles and weld small tacks to hold it down. Now it can’t move as you weld.
Once everything is solid, weld the four corners and each side. Cut your braces and tacks loose, and you’re good to go.
What about long welds? If you’re butting two pieces of metal together, for instance, and welding them to create a wider plate, you can’t start at one end and start welding – it’ll warp. Put your plate on your bench, and tack it down. Weld it on both ends, then weld it in the middle. Go about a third of the way, unless it’s a really long run, whereupon you’ll want to break it up even more.
Tack it on each end, then weld that third. Let it cool. Then get your outside welds, always working in toward the middle. That helps push the heat to the metal, where it’s already been welded.
How do you remove the tack welds? Caron uses Walter Zip Wheel cut off disks. They come in a package. They’re thin and take a tiny kerf. They strong and last a long time. Caron puts one on a 4-1/2″ grinder, holds the disk at an angle, and cuts the weld loose. Then he cleans up those little areas where the tack welds were with a grinder.
Caron is ready to go back to work, so you have time to subscribe and see the videos he posts each Wednesday. You can also go to http://www.kevincaron to see more how-to videos and his wild sculptures.
Unless you want to wait one more moment to see him gracefully handle a square ….
“Inspired sculpture for public & private places.”
Artist Kevin Caron has been sculpting full time since 2006. You can see his more than 45 commissions in public and private places coast-to-coast and online at http://www.kevincaron.com.
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Twitter: https://twitter.com/kevincaronart
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View Comments
Nice method, thanks mr
Thank you for reminding me the essential sometimes underappreciated tack welding technique.
I love it when you say taccot.. taccot.. haha. nice tips
3:17 you realize.. just buy the tool...
haha
Those Bessey clamps are seriously expensive - 150+$ each! buy eight - 1200$...
Mr kevin caron..where u from sir
Wow, very helpful, I wish I had watched this before I just warped a 14gauge plate!!
Not only is the table I have at work warped, but since the things Im working on are essentially large tanks to be filled with antifreeze, tacking that stainless sheet metal to the table isnt really an option for me.
This forst one i made was just so warped. It's abput 16 feet of weld i have to get done as quick as I can. Is there a way to not only hold it straight, but minimize warpage?
thanks for all the videos! Super appreciated!
Looks an works great ,till you cut her loose.. lmao