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Dual shield rookie

Willie B

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2016
Messages
4,066
Location
Mount Tabor VT
Occupation
Electrician
I've only run two 33 LB reels of .045" Dual Shield. First roll I had a miserable time with porosity & / or worm tracks. I was crying the blues at Maine Oxy & the manager explained that part of the number on the box includes the gas needed. I had wire for 85% gas, but was using 75% gas. He sold me a different roll & cured that problem.

Another problem plaguing me was bird nesting. I could run as much as I wanted without striking an arc. Strike an arc, within an inch of weld it'd bird nest! My gun is a big Bernard 300 amp gun I bought when I melted my Miller M25 gun. Down side of Bernard is no two guns are alike, & part numbers are hard to find. Eventually I found a "JUMP LINER" It replaces the last 18" of the liner & is much smaller in internal diameter. This, along with some little felt pads & lubricant cured the birdnesting problem.
 

Old Doug

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2013
Messages
4,573
Location
Mo
Bird nesting was a nightmare were i worked . One big deal was never trigger it. If you started to weld and stopped for a second then strated agin it was all over . Dual Shield was a big learning deal . If there would have been someone that could have come in and schooled us on it he would have saved the company several thousands of dollars in lost time and scraped wire. It was a new shop and a new way to weld for everyone there.
 

Welder Dave

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 11, 2014
Messages
12,632
Location
Canada
Dual-shield is flux-core wire that uses an external shielding gas. It needs knurled drive rolls but you have you to be very careful you don't have too much tension on the drive rolls. Too much can make birds nesting more of a problem. The wire is hollow so it will squish easier and deform from too much drive roll pressure. Too much drive roll pressure will also shave tiny bits of wire off the spool as the wire is fed. Birds nesting is the wire piling up right after the drive rolls. Birds nesting can be caused by a few factors or a combination of factors. Wrong size liner or a plugged liner from dirt or metal shaved off the roll, too tight of curve in the gun, wrong size or deformed contact tip (worn out or built up with spatter) (deformed wire can jam in the contact tip as well). Flux-core wire doesn't normally use a wiper before the drive rolls because it is coated with graphite. The graphite acts as a lubricant and also prevents rust. Using a dry wiper would actually make feeding worse. A lubricated wiper may or may not help. There are some that believe a lubricated wiper makes the wire attract more dust and dirt. Flux-core also uses a little more stick out than solid wire. Self-shielded flux-core can have up to 3 3/4" stick out but is uses with a long insulator. On wire without an insulator using too short of stick out could also contribute to birds nesting because the wire would expand from the heat and get jammed in the contact tip. That's likely what happens if the wire birds nests after striking an arc and stopping and starting again.
 
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oceanobob

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 13, 2010
Messages
751
Location
oceano california
Occupation
general contractor
I've found:
1) a careful exact investigation of the welding voltage and amperage by way of a good DVM will give the answer as to the 'random' defects .... this has solved the problem more occasions than blaming the subtle breeze.
2) A 'no brush' gound clamp (w sealed Hg) is advised when using a rotator; the one we tried and bought is from meridian lab and is called rotocon IIRC.
rotocon meridian labs.png
 
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Welder Dave

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 11, 2014
Messages
12,632
Location
Canada
Random defects sometimes just happen with flux-core even when everything is set up perfect. I worked in a shop where another welder threw the gun across the shop because the flux-core went wonky. I had the exact same thing happen. Welding 4 gussets on the base of flare stacks, 3 went perfect, roll the pipe to put the 4th one in flat position just like the other 3 and would get worm tracks and porosity. Didn't happen very often but did happen a few times. Real pain to have to grind out with a die grinder. Usually had to grind it out as best as possible and reweld it with stick. If you tried to run flux-core again the porosity would just come back. Welds in the open without corners rarely had any problems.
 

Toddgarage

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Joined
Jun 13, 2022
Messages
80
Location
S.E. Michigan
Occupation
Construction, welding/fabrication, operator
Something very crusty and rusty got to the yard this weekend. Guess it’s time to try this outer-shield or dual shield welding process.
It might be a few weeks. But I’ll try to remember to reply here with an update
 

Willie B

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2016
Messages
4,066
Location
Mount Tabor VT
Occupation
Electrician
I have had a long learning curve with Dual Shield. First try I burned up my stock MIG gun, it is a HOT process!

I had occasional trouble with porosity, & worm tracks, & the last time I used that 33 LB reel it would bird nest immediately! I tried everything, even these little felt gizmos you put a special oil on. Nothing solved my problem until I was poking through my ftuff that came with the big Bernard gun. Found a Jump liner. It is about 16" long, you cut off the main liner, this fits over it & necks down to a smaller diameter, wire pushes easier.

When I was ready to give up on Dual Shield entirely, the manager at Maine OXY asked what gas I was using. I was using wire meant for 85% argon, I was using 75% argon. He sold me a new roll of wire worked much better.
 

Old Doug

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2013
Messages
4,573
Location
Mo
Something very crusty and rusty got to the yard this weekend. Guess it’s time to try this outer-shield or dual shield welding process.
It might be a few weeks. But I’ll try to remember to reply here with an update
I passed several weld test with dual shield it needs to be very very clean . It will not weld over any paint or rust.
 

Welder Dave

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 11, 2014
Messages
12,632
Location
Canada
I would think dirty or rusty steel would wreak havoc with dual-shield. I recall there was a Lincoln Innershield (self-shielded flux-core) wire that was good for galvanized and dirtier steel. Can't remember if it was NR211 or a different wire. There are a lot of different Innershield wires but you never hear much about them. Some are straight polarity and some are reverse polarity. I always shake my head a little when I read comments that (self shielded) flux-core always has to be run on straight polarity. It depends entirely on what wire you're using. I've never seen a dual-shield wire that runs on straight polarity though. Another interesting tidbit is that sub-arc, which is a wire feed process can run on AC current. A tandem sub-arc set up can run on DC and AC at the same time. Sub-arc can also have 2 wires feeding each puddle for max. deposition rates. I worked in 1 shop that had a tandem sub-arc but they never used it. It was older but there was a huge 1200 amp Lincoln AC power source sitting there. I did a quick look and they still sell the Idealarc AC1200 for over $40,000us! Being AC it runs on single phase power. I wouldn't want to have to pay the electric bill for that welder.
 

.RC.

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2012
Messages
786
Location
Central Qld, Australia
I would think dirty or rusty steel would wreak havoc with dual-shield.

Got my first roll of dual shield this afternoon to play with. I did find it works better with the right polarity and with the gas bottle turned on :D It is an embarrassingly crappy bead, crooked as a dogs hind leg, but was just wanting to see what it did on rusty rubbish. The utter crap weld above it is lincoln NR 211MP, the dual shield is cheap Hyundai wire.
 

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Pony

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 18, 2014
Messages
370
Location
SE Queensland
I've been using Hyundai Supershield 11 cored wire for a while now, best I've found for welding gal cattle rail.
Feeds good, welds good, happy chappy.
 

digger doug

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 2, 2011
Messages
1,451
Location
NW Pennsylvania
Occupation
Thrash-A-Matic designer
Got my first roll of dual shield this afternoon to play with. I did find it works better with the right polarity and with the gas bottle turned on :D It is an embarrassingly crappy bead, crooked as a dogs hind leg, but was just wanting to see what it did on rusty rubbish. The utter crap weld above it is lincoln NR 211MP, the dual shield is cheap Hyundai wire.
Try it again, this time use a helmet...... ;)
 

.RC.

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2012
Messages
786
Location
Central Qld, Australia
I've been using Hyundai Supershield 11 cored wire for a while now, best I've found for welding gal cattle rail.
Feeds good, welds good, happy chappy.

I have not tried the Hyundai SuperShield 11. A few years ago I got some Hyundai self shielded flux core hard facing. I find it pretty good. As an aside, you can also get self shielded 0.9mm hard facing wire from bunnings of all places. Bossweld GLX600. Not much chromium in it, but it is very hard.

I bought 4 X 4.5kg new and still sealed but fairly old Lincoln NR211MP at an auction for something like $10 a roll I should have bought beer with my money instead. It is OK but damn fussy stuff. Other then that I have just bought the Weldclass 0.9 self shielded wire. I have had a love hate relationship with self shielded. It reminded me of my welding start, home made gates out of 3/4" water pipe with an old 15amp plug AC transformer welder running 6013 rods. I then went to gas mig and that made filling in the gaps from poorly cut pipe a breeze. But bottle rental (this was before buy your own existed) got the best of me, so I went to self shielded and it is very convienant and certainly does the job in capable hands, but I tolerate it rather then love it.

Now I am back to using gas again.

Here is some 2mm cattle rail welded to each other vertical down with the dual shield wire.20240501_194918.jpg
 
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