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Coyote
17th September 2008, 18:08
What welding courses are worth going to in the Wellington region? I've seen several advertised, all with varying costs and results. I'd like to know enough so I can weld up a tube chassis for a car or bike that could eventually become road legal. Do the welds have to be done by someone qualified or could I do them then get them inspected later?

I do have some experience welding from metalwork class, but only a quarter of the stuff I did actually looked good/was strong.

CookMySock
17th September 2008, 19:03
I'd like to know enough so I can weld up a tube chassis for a car or bike that could eventually become road legal.I want to do the same, but I don't think I would dare, regardless of my experience (small).

I would tack and pay someone to finish it off with the TIG. Maybe I would feel differently once I had some TIG time, but atm the wouldn't attempt it. Maybe I would be perfectly ok.

Steve

Coyote
17th September 2008, 19:10
I want to do the same, but I don't think I would dare, regardless of my experience (small).

I would tack and pay someone to finish it off with the TIG. Maybe I would feel differently once I had some TIG time, but atm the wouldn't attempt it. Maybe I would be perfectly ok.

Steve
I'd like to give it a go if I can. But I'd probably do the same if I didn't feel my welds would be strong enough.

I mainly want to make a Le Mans inspired fibreglass car shell, but I need a suitable chassis for it. Most chassis that turn up on trademe are from utes.

Colapop
17th September 2008, 19:13
Hey D, check it out with someone like Acme, Windsor or MJH Engineering. They'll be able to tell you who provides industry certifiable courses (welding certs that actually mean something)

geoffm
17th September 2008, 19:42
Talk to a low volume certifier before you get into this. I believe the welding will need tobe done by a certified welder, and paperwork will be requred.
Making a road legal chassis is not an easy DIY affair. (the fact the Chinese can make some very poorly welded scooter frames that are allowed on the road is a whole different thing...)

Coyote
17th September 2008, 21:44
Talk to a low volume certifier before you get into this. I believe the welding will need tobe done by a certified welder, and paperwork will be requred.
Making a road legal chassis is not an easy DIY affair. (the fact the Chinese can make some very poorly welded scooter frames that are allowed on the road is a whole different thing...)
Would be keen to become certified if that is the case (as I believe it is too). Course, with all the skills I want to acquire I'll spend all my time training and not earning any money.

Maybe I should just rego the kit car as a 50cc moped?

bungbung
18th September 2008, 09:37
There is a ITO welding school in Tawa