Welding on factory frames Tua’h (1 Viewer)

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I am beyond excited for you, no one deserves to drive a new pig project more than you! I cant wait until you get to drive the rest of them..
Welp, I didn’t get to take it out yesterday. Mostly because we’re trying to address the heat in the cab, and the wife was going to be in the passenger seat for the 100 plus mile loop from home and back again.

We did take the 250 though. It’s a Toyota 4x4 station wagon, right? The rest of the group was our son (in his 80) and the other current (and two former) guys in Bump It, along with their wives or girlfriends, kids and dogs, except TJ, who had other plans. Kind of a company outing.

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You're 100% correct on all accounts and I don't believe I've said anything different.. My questions to the rest of the peanut gallery should have been phrased differently to exclude you and I'm still sorry for making you sad.

Don’t apologize for what didn’t occur.
I started this thread and said I have certain beliefs on the subject of automotive frame repair and modification, I’m not an expert but my beliefs are mine and if anyone is willing let’s talk about the subject and see if we can learn something new and maybe help someone else in the process.

You have made comments like.

“ I'm sure I've forgotten everything I did back in college on finite element simulations of welded structures, so you're probably right.”

“If you want to continue, let me know if you're asking about notch stress concentration factor of fillet welds or something else.”

You sounded at the time like you might have some real knowledge on the subject and “YES” I did have and still do more questions but didn’t want to offend you by asking them somewhere inappropriate. I felt like this was the right place to ask questions and talk about interesting subjects that pertain to building 4X4 station wagons.

Early on in this thread you posted a link to a weld theory book and said that book would answer all the asked questions, later you said “Please reference section 2.2.3 (p 13-14) of the work I posted first in this thread on why controlling your weld pool (“puddle”) size is important”

I’ve read that section and a bit beyond and asked you “as someone that has read all 267 pages” what are your thought on this “new” technique of making your MIG welds on steel look like TIG welds on aluminum (stacking dimes). You didn’t give a direct answer and said you are just getting back into it so I gave you some examples to explain the process with a video showing a couple guys that are very good at it telling you to turn the machine down and use smaller wire stacking weld on top (cold joint) to give it the TIG weld look. I posted a second video with what appears to be an older guy saying basically the same thing and doing some testing but giving his opinion on why you shouldn’t do it. J F Lancaster talks about proper weld penetration in the “book” and I agree if we are welding for strength the stack of dimes weld is not a process we would do, it should be considered ornamental welding and limited to non-critical areas if failure would cause harm.
I did say that the whole subject of MIG and making ‘e’ shapes is new to me. I was taught to control the shape of the pool/puddle, mostly by what seems to now be described as “push pull”, but dad was emphatic about consistency of the pool/puddle shape.

My uninformed opinion is that TIG is a better process than MIG for nearly any welding, but it does cost more, which is why MIG is popular, I guess. (Proper prep costs more too.)

I’ve not done it, but TIG seems to me to be superior because you’re directly in control of the heat, vs. a static setting on the machine and trying to move in and out of the pool/puddle to control the heat. The “stacked dimes” of TIG looks to me (again, I’ve only watched video) to arise from the overlapping dabbing of the filler rod into the puddle. The torch (tungsten) often moves in an ‘e’ pattern to control the heat in the area being welded.

But hey, let’s ask Bob, or anyone who is proficient at TIG, really.

A big difference with MIG is the wire moves at a constant rate, and it has to go somewhere, so there is a lot more motion of the wire (gun) than there is in stick, and (again, haven’t thought about it, haven’t done it), but an attempt to emulate TIG with MIG is likely going to result in a less strong weld, especially with an inexperienced welder who is primarily focused on aesthetics (stacking dimes) not the strength of the weld.

How the cap looks visually (short of showing true weld faults) seems very subjective. It's like someone saying you have to have a preference for partners with blond hair, not red heads. Simply because that's what they prefer.

Seems we agree here. Let me know if that’s not the case.

Since you Bob and I are the only ones asking each other questions and he and I mostly agree on everything would you mind sharing your thoughts on supporting a frame during welding?

When you were in college and sitting in your finite element simulations of welded structures class what did they talk about warping the structure during the process?

I didn’t take a class in FEA, it was too new a technique then for a class to exist in the BSME sequence. (There might have been a MS level class. I don’t remember.) I know the linear and non-linear optimization classes taught by Dr. Peterson were 400- and 500-level, but he let me in because it was useful for what I was doing for him.

What I did do was modify the code to NASTRAN to deal with things like non-linear loads for Dr. Chase and wrote and incorporated both a linear (based on the techniques in a program called LINDO out of U Chicago) and non-linear (based on Dr. Peterson’s research) optimizer for Dr. Peterson. I also wrote number of output filters to a different software package (MOVIE.BYU) to visualize the output of NASTRAN. Said output was typically 50-250 pages of fan folded computer printout that someone would then dig through with a pencil and ruler to find the required info.

Turns out many professors have consulting gigs on the side. Their customers loved the (very early days) visualization they could show. We were even working on some animations by running the model several times (took a long time, tied up the Vax for hours) and then stitching together the frames into a short movie.

“here is a visualization of the bending moments due to 20cm and 100cm accumulated snow loads on your new domed stadium, as well as my five figure invoice.” (Yes, red is bad news.)

There were a lot of “Green is good, red is bad” pics. These must be right, it came out the computer! <Insert numerical analysis here.>

(Also how I got into high-tech, but you don’t ask.)

Structures do deform under load, sometimes to yield.

TL;dr: the direct answer to your question: No they didn’t talk about “warp” due to welding in any FEA class. No such class when I was there and it’s easier to model stress and deformation due to point loads on, say, a beam or mast, such as a flagpole. This is the type of thing that is taught.

I did, however, take thermodynamics and heat transfer (these are separate courses), and I did a project for a professor (in Civil Engineering, but he was also my Mormon Bishop, and I was trying to keep him happy, as BYU is a religious school, and by that point, I was already considering walking away from that church and everything associated with it) to predict “warp” in a welded structure (a truss) for a client.

The basic answer is that metal expands when heated (and the material can undergo chemical and structural changes due to this heating, but we won’t worry about that right now.) The surrounding, cooler metal acts as a constraint, preventing the heated area from expanding freely.

As the weld (and metal around it) cools, the metal contracts. Because it's restricted by the cooler metal, it can't shrink back to its original size. This creates stresses which can cause the metal to permanently deform or “warp”.

This is a big reason why pre-heating is a good technique. If you wish, I can go into detail why “driving the water out” is all but meaningless *for mild steel*: Pre-heating to an assumed 250-300F is great for alloyed steels because it drives hydrogen diffusion, which will reduce hydrogen-induced cracking. A high carbon steel (which our 1970s truck frames are definitely not made of) will require a higher temperature than this, and I’m of the opinion that crayons or temperature sticks are preferred to IR thermometers or a wild-assed guess when determining if the correct pre-heat temp has been obtained. At the same time, you’re not doing any harm to mild steel with a pre-heat to 250-300F, and *maybe* you’re reducing warping some. You do you.

Let’s return to “not sitting in class”:

The modeling involved application of Fourier's law (a fundamental principle of heat transfer that governs how heat is conducted through a material) into NASTRAN with a relatively simple model of the thermal expansion of the material, constrained by the modulus of elasticity of the material and the rigidity of the truss as it is being constructed. Within limits, hotter areas expand more, especially if they are not already welded, but welded structures also encounter more stress due to the expansion. FEA is fundamentally about sectioning the model of the structure into very small cubes and applying the stress model to each cube, so each cube expands based on the temperature (and presence) of the surrounding cubes, but the metal is also undergoing stress where the structure resists this movement. Repeat for every weld in whatever sequence you defined.

Fourier’s Law, however, does not describe the entire welding process on its own, which also involves other heat transfer mechanisms like convection and radiation. Note that these are both applied to cooling in the welding process, and cooling is the phase that gives rise to most of the stress in the material being welded. Apply what you learned in thermo and heat transfer. Repeat for every weld in the sequence you defined. For the entire truss. Every time.

Once we had a model that would generate verifiable results, it was repeated for a number of weld sequences and cooling times in a linear optimization framework to minimize the resultant deformation (“warp”). Remember there are a lot of welds in a truss and that most trusses are not linear in the load bearing axis (aka “crown”), and that the construction of same is critical to the resulting work piece.

And then when you’re finished, you load test the deformed truss, first with NASTRAN, (in the computer) and then after verifying the deformation model with real world measurements (again) you load test (with strain gauges) in the real world. Way more satisfying than homework… IJS.

Since you also asked for my thoughts on “supporting a frame during welding”, I’ll attempt an answer, though I touched on same above.

By “supporting”, I assume you mean work holding or clamping. Clamping the workpiece is generally a good idea. But, even though clamping will reduce deformation, it also can, in some situations, increase the residual stresses in the workpiece, which can lead to cracking. This is why, for example, there is a rule of thumb about keeping the bead six bolt diameters away from any bolt hole, even if it’s not bolted. (Remember what I said in the other thread about every hole representing a rise in stress concentration?)

If you're making reference to your "welding while the frame is suspending in a rotisserie" BS, well, you already answered that question, it doesn't matter.

Lots more on the subject if you wish. Decent overview:


Only 72 pages, some of them not interesting, though there is a light discussion of notch stress in fillet welds. Something else I mentioned.

I guess I’ve not forgotten everything. Thanks for the trip back down that time in my life. I’m not sure it was a happier time, though it was less … stressful.
 
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Mostly because we’re trying to address the heat in the cab
I hope you guys get it figured out sooner than later, after watching your attempts over the last several years at building the perfect pig I can think of few more deserving.

I did say that the whole subject of MIG and making ‘e’ shapes is new to me.
How the cap looks visually (short of showing true weld faults) seems very subjective. It's like someone saying you have to have a preference for partners with blond hair, not red heads. Simply because that's what they prefer.

Seems we agree here. Let me know if that’s not the case.

For this conversation (welding on automotive frames) most of us older welders stick to using a stringer vs a weave bead unless doing something specific “filling a gap’’, this lower case e weave to make your MIG (“GMAW”) look like a TIG (“GTAW”) weld I believe personally is a terrible idea. At no point would it be a good idea to use under sized wire then turn the wire speed and volts down to a point that you are setting a bead on top of the base metal to give it the appearance of a weld process different than the one you are using, especially when we are talking about something structural like an automotive frame.

I was hoping that you or your guy could have an adult conversation with us about why he used that technique on your frame and maybe change my mind, I’m always trying to ask questions respectfully with the hope of engaging in conversation. I believe you are well informed and your guy clearly is talented and if I didn’t care what you had to say I wouldn’t have asked, then you get guys like @bobm and some of the other talented fabricators putting in their .02 the conversation has the potential to change lots of our minds on what we believe.

Just so I’m clear I’ll say it again, I don’t believe any of the work being done on the BATPIG is substandard and the shop doing the work clearly has some craftsmen working there.

If you're making reference to your "welding while the frame is suspending in a rotisserie" BS, well, you already answered that question, it doesn't matter.
Mattering and “BS” are at opposite ends and I will say I believe something in the middle.

Not BS because like you mentioned above when you apply heat to steel it moves, when you weld on steel it has the potential to move a lot. Bracing, supporting, fixturing or whatever you want to call it is always a good idea. If I had a big I-beam fixture table I would have used it when I welded your frame.

Mattering yes you are right is really doesn’t matter (A) because it’s “your” frame and if you’re happy then the rest of us should be happy for you, as has been said before this is a hobby and if no one dies and you’re having fun then you’re doing it right.. And (B) any warping that could be an issue is easily addressed by a shop with a big I-beam fixture table.



We aren’t talking about race car stuff happening in race car shops we are talking about station wagons that are driving of fire trails for 99% of us down here.

I guess I’ve not forgotten everything. Thanks for the trip back down that time in my life. I’m not sure it was a happier time, though it was less … stressful.
I hope daydreaming about these projects you have going makes the stress of the day job more bearable!
 
I was hoping that you or your guy could have an adult conversation with us about why he used that technique on your frame and maybe change my mind
'my guy' hates Internet forums even more than I do.
Not BS because like you mentioned above when you apply heat to steel it moves, when you weld on steel it has the potential to move a lot. Bracing, supporting, fixturing or whatever you want to call it is always a good idea. If I had a big I-beam fixture table I would have used it when I welded your frame.

Mattering yes you are right is really doesn’t matter (A) because it’s “your” frame and if you’re happy then the rest of us should be happy for you, as has been said before this is a hobby and if no one dies and you’re having fun then you’re doing it right.. And (B) any warping that could be an issue is easily addressed by a shop with a big I-beam fixture table.
It's questionable that any deformation occurred. your whole series of posts begs the question, and we're right back to metalurgy.
 
It's questionable that any deformation occurred. your whole series of posts begs the question, and we're right back to metalurgy.
There very well could be an egghead that at some point in his college career wrote a paper about Fourier’s Law that disproves what I believe.

Your frame is the first frame I’ve seen hung on a rotisserie at the ends and welded from end to end and if you’re telling me that frame has no deformation from that process then we should find that egghead and get him together with your guy and write a paper on this new seemingly impossible technique that contradicts literally every other book on the subject.

I very well could be wrong here, I’ve seen lots of axles that have had spring perches, shock mounts, whatever welded on with the axle still assembled sitting on the tires while the welding is done, no fixturing , bracing or anything and the guy bolts it all back together and I’m guessing everything is fine.

If I weld on a tube here it pulls 100% of the time, if I fixture it first it pulls less but I’ve never not had to go back and straighten after welding if straight was the desirable outcome. Every shop that I know of sending out high end axle housings welds them on a fixture and has a process to confirm straightness.

I’m not saying it has to be done my way vs another way what I’m saying is if the amount of deformation was within your acceptable limit then groovy drive on I hope that works out for you, if you’re saying it didn’t deform then I need to know more.
 
So, what we have here! Is I don't know 30 ****ing paragraphs of ****ing BLAH, BLAH, BLAH, while someones on (supposedly a nice company outing with there employees WTF.) And instead of enjoying your time with them you need to fly off with the Biggest Load of 🐂💩 that nobody gives 2 ****s about! Especially from someone who quoting you, does not know how to GTAW or GMAW and has'nt welded anything but Stick in 30 ****ing years! Why are you even responding to this. It was supposed to be a thread for learning and a the first sentence in this thread is A Lighthearted response!! The thread was intented for a response from your Newly aquired employee's It was intended as a learning tool for people with less expierience (apperently you need it more than anyone!) So you can read all your theories and other 💩 you learned years ago butt 🐖👈 nothing replaces real World expierience 🤔🧐😳😲😮😉🐖👈
 
> butt 🐖👈nothing replaces real World expierience

That’s how we got religion and ivermectin (a horse dewormer) as MAGA’s magic cure-all, Bob.

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