Simon, I'll give you a couple tips!
First of all what I see clean metal, so that's good, I also see no spatting, which is good too, so you got that going on for you. Also, if you text me a pic I can give it a better look and see what you're trying to weld.
What I see w the welds are they're not getting hot enough. You should go find yourself some scrap metal that's the same thickness and get that machine on the right settings.
You can achieve a hotter weld two way, one, cranking the power up, or slowing down your wire speed so you're spending more time in the same area.
You're going to want to go for option two, since the first way can easily send holes through your panels and will take a more intermediate skill to fill up.
At the end of the day, a well set up machine is going to be doing the hard work and you're just telling it where to work.
If you're seeing the edges of the bead above the metal, it's not welding.
Text me more pics
First of all what I see clean metal, so that's good, I also see no spatting, which is good too, so you got that going on for you. Also, if you text me a pic I can give it a better look and see what you're trying to weld.
What I see w the welds are they're not getting hot enough. You should go find yourself some scrap metal that's the same thickness and get that machine on the right settings.
You can achieve a hotter weld two way, one, cranking the power up, or slowing down your wire speed so you're spending more time in the same area.
You're going to want to go for option two, since the first way can easily send holes through your panels and will take a more intermediate skill to fill up.
At the end of the day, a well set up machine is going to be doing the hard work and you're just telling it where to work.
If you're seeing the edges of the bead above the metal, it's not welding.
Text me more pics
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