How To MIG Weld Aluminum
How To MIG Weld Aluminum
How To MIG Weld Aluminum
MIG welding aluminum relies heavily on having the right equipment due to the soft nature of
the welding electrode wire. With aluminum a special wire feed system is needed otherwise
the welding electrode wire will break and bunch up. Once the right equipment is set up it’s a
pretty easy metal to weld.
The bottom line is, the bottom line, if you need to deposit a lot of filler wire in a production
driven environment, then this is the right choice for this non ferrous material like aluminum
and magnesium. This is all depends on the thickness of material that will be welded. You
need the base material to be thick enough to handle the heat and most welds should be in
structural shape form. If it is really thin aluminum then a TIG welder would be the best
choice.
The main trade off is the skill level needed to weld out of position. For most situations this
makes MIG the choice of production welding used in shipyards, trailer building, and
aluminum tank construction. The proof is in the skills level needed that shipyard staffing
companies expect. For most recruiters hiring pipe welders (career welders who travel for
work) they expect about half of the welders to fail their 6G restricted x-ray weld test. That is
just a given! On hiring aluminum MIG welders they expect 9 out of 10 welders to fail the
test. If you need to know, the test is a 2G, 3G and 4G ½ " plate test that gets x-rayed. Not a
big deal but that just shows the difficulty of MIG welding aluminum out of position.
If you have a choice of processes for welding aluminum then it all depends on thickness of
the material. MIG welding is great on anything that is 1/8 of an inch or thicker and is in
position. TIG welding works best on thinner stuff and pipe.
When it comes to welding aluminum the gas choices and electrode choices are pretty simple!
That is about it! The Argon/Helium mixture is only used on aluminum that is thicker then 1/2
of an inch. The helium mixed into the Argon helps create a hotter arc to penetrate aluminum.
If needed you could still go with 100% Argon the all around gas for heavy plate aluminum
MIG welding!
Argon Gas for Aluminum Welding
Electrode selection is depends on the base metal and thickness. This is another area you
should talk to your local weld supplier about. They know what products work best for what
materials. In most cases your aluminum electrode wire selections and designations are:
ER4043
ER5356
2014
3003
3004
4043
5052
6061
6062
6063
Cast Aluminum Grades
43
214
355
356
5050
5052
5056
5083
5154
5356
5454
5456
Pretty simple! Here is the deal, you typically don't want to use a wire thicker than .035 and
the high the number the stiffer the wire. The ER5356 wire is much stiffer then the ER4043
wire. What that does is effect is how the wire will act in the wire feed system. Remember the
special equipment is needed because the wire is too soft to feed the regular way. So any wire
that is stiffer will have less trouble passing through the liner and to the gun.
If you want to weld aluminum you are going to need some additional equipment to add to
your MIG welders wire feeder. The reason is the aluminum filler wire is so soft it gets
jammed and tangles in a regular wire feed system. You choices come down to adding either
a:
The push-pull wire feed system is most commonly used on factory floors. The way it works
is the wire feeder pushes the wire as it normally would. Then the pull system is another
feeder in the handle of the MIG gun that pulls it. This system works great when everything is
set-up properly. The trick is to set-up the push-pull system properly (the hard part) then
everything else is fine. The pro of this system is large wire spools can be used and down time
is minimal.
The first picture below is a double rollers push feed on a Millermatic 350P MIG Machine.
The second and third pictures below are the bottom view, and top view of a Python pull feed
gun.
Python Gun Pull Feed Aluminum MIG
The spool gun is the best choice for welding out of position and small jobs. It is the most
trouble free of the wire feed systems but comes with a price. The wire can only be 1 lb
(typically a 4" max diameter spool) or less in size. Not a good thing when it comes to
production welding but again it works well in all positions.
Aluminum MIG Welding Spool Gun
When it comes to MIG welding aluminum joint preparation is a must. The obvious apply, but
the cleaning methods change. Rule #1; you don't want to grind the aluminum with a grinding
disk made for steel or stainless! With aluminum you have three ways of cleaning the joint:
For rough stuff sanding or filing is fine! But if you are building a product like a ladder then
an acid bath is you best choice. If it is rough work you can add a flapper sanding disk to your
grinder or just grab a piece of sandpaper and go to work. The acid wash works great but there
are some serious health issues when using acid. It all comes down to the needs of the product,
how it must look finished and what your budget is.
Welding aluminum is one of the few metals that do not require much bracing of the joints.
There is minimal distortion and not too much to worry about. You just don't get a better metal
to work with.
The settings needed to MIG weld aluminum are pretty much the same for all positions. In
most cases it will take 21 to 23 volts to get the arc to spray transfer. If welding out of position
you will want the wire feed speed fast enough to keep the weld full of metal at a fast crackle.
Aluminum requires the wire feed speed to push the wire into the joint. If it slows for any
reason you get a fused tip or get a weld that does not stick! Don't be scared to turn up the wire
feed speed!
There are two three transfer types when MIG welding aluminum and they are:
Globular
Spray
Spray Pulse
In most cases the weld will be done in a spray transfer mode. If you are lucky enough and
have one of those pulse spray machines then the job will be much easier. Globular is used on
thinner metals because the voltage setting is not high enough to produce a true spray transfer.
MIG welding aluminum is position is done with a true spray transfer but welding out of
position is either a globular or a spray transfer. The difference between a true spray transfer
in the flat position and out of position is the sound of the weld. In position produces a hum or
hissing sound. Out of position aluminum welding produces a FAST Crackle sound with white
sparks flying and occasional spatter.
Pulse spray takes advantage of varying the voltage so that the spray arc never gets to hot and
never gets to cold. The best way to describe it is almost like spot welding but never shutting
down the arc. It is a series of hot and cold welds that are working compensate for a lack of
skill. For out of position MIG welding pulse spray cannot be beat.
The BIG ISSUE when setting up you machine is the TEMPERATURE of the aluminum! If
you are welding cold aluminum or spot/tack welding then machine setting are not issues. On
the other hand is you are welding joints then temperature is a BIG ISSUE. When you start to
weld a joint that is cold it will seem the heat is to low but as you go on the heat settings will
seem too high. That is the BIG ISSUE with aluminum! The BIG DOWN SIDE OF
OVERHEATING is the entire JOINT WILL TURN TO MUSH and FALL to the FLOOR
WITHOUT WARNING. Yeah it is all going fine and all of a sudden it all just literally falls
apart! This issue affects all types of aluminum welding that use an arc or flame to melt the
metal.
One of the reasons it is so difficult to detect the joint is overheating is the fact that the molten
puddle does not look much different than the base metal. The puddle looks like tin foil
moving. If this were steel there would be a bright red glow, the joint spitting sparks and you
would clearly feel the heat is way too hot. Aluminum just requires a feel and experience to
know that the temperature is not t0o hot. If you really want to be safe you can always get a
heat stick to keep marking next to the weld to test the temperature.
The techniques are no different except for the speed you need to keep in order to weld out of
position. If welding in position there is lots of room for error because you have time to react.
On the other hand out of position welding is more of a gut feel! Techniques for MIG welding
aluminum are forehand welding and in most cases stringer beads only (yes you can weave but
it is not worth risking overheating a joint). Out of position welding is a fast whipping or
steady motion with a focus of staying ahead of the puddle. It is very odd traveling so fast
compared to other welding processes and that is why the fail rate is so high among the
shipyard welding tests.
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