I was looking through some welding forums the other day and noticed some people talking about welding two beer/soda cans together. They said it was fairly hard to do. I had to give it a try! Went out to the shop and this is what I came up with. I really didnt find it that hard to do. To me the hardest part was getting the cans tacked together. After that you can concentrate the heat on the bead you have started. Has anyone else tried this? Mike
Nice welds but when I talk about welding up a beer can I meen through the sides where the can is thinest. Imagine cutting two cans in half to make a top and bottom then welding them back together to make a normal looking can again. I'm sure this is way off topic but it's a fun challange!
That would be very impressive. I tried to lay a bead on the side of a can and it instantly blew through as soon as I struck the arc. I would love to see a picture if anyone has sucessfuly done it.
Ever had any luck with alumna weld .It works great on beer cans ,Have not had any luck with it on any other aluminum.
Here is my welding Instructor. Won-hung WayTulo ..He was a master welder of cans. Problem was he kept lighting his face on fire..
Well bugger me sideways with a Sally! With skill like that, bet you could build your own cylinder heads starting with just a neat little bead!
Dang I thought you were talking about using a beer can as a welder on the cheap. Or maybe even welding while drunk. I've seen some welds that looked like they were done by a drunk!
A buddy of my Dads, RIP, welded aircraft aluminum tail section parts during WW2 with a torch for Douglass. He said the test was tough. You didn't just weld it, it was stress tested, and checked seven ways from sundown. He claimed a guy he worked with could weld two Schlitz steel cans together down the middle. He said most was 1/16 or less alum. Lippy
wonder if you could slip a copper backer in through the tab hole to make striking the arc easier without blowing through?? not that anyone would cheat
Those are impressive welds. I tried welding aluminum cans end to end both with tig and oxy/hydrogen..Worked fine for both. Back in the 50's I gas welded 60 feet of steel beer cans together to make a vertical antenna..It worked great. The hardest part was putting it up without kinking any of them. The best part of the project was emptying the cans.
My uncle's sister's step-brother's neighbor says he can weld a fart to a dryer sheet...wonder what heat setting he uses..
Got a friend who is into vw's, they weld cooling tubes onto the fins to make water cooled conversions. Anyway, he practiced for a long time to get the cans to weld together, but by age 16 he got it. it is good to have friends.
i went to visit a welding class at a tech school and some guy cut a copenhagen lid in half and welded it back together, not sure what he used to weld it
Can you describe the method? TIG? What filler? What size? What tungsten? What size? What gas? What welder settings?