I’ve spent 10 years behind a welding helmet, and I’ll be honest – most of my learning came from failures. In my first year running a fabrication shop, I scrapped over $50,000 worth of work due to weld defects. Each failed joint taught me something new about what goes wrong when we fuse metal. After teaching 200+ welding students, I’ve noticed the same problems trip up everyone from beginners to seasoned pros.
Welding troubleshooting is the systematic process of identifying weld defects, determining their root causes, and making the right adjustments to fix them. Most welding problems fall into three categories: equipment issues, technique mistakes, or material preparation failures.
The most common welding problems are porosity (gas bubbles), spatter (metal droplets), undercut (grooves at weld edges), lack of fusion (poor bonding), burn-through (excessive heat), and cracks (stress fractures). Most defects are fixed by adjusting machine settings, improving technique, or better material preparation.
- Quick Fix: Start with material preparation – 60% of weld problems originate from dirty metal
- Equipment Check: Verify gas flow, wire feed, and connections before adjusting technique
- Technique Adjustment: Travel speed and torch angle are the most common culprits
Quick Reference: 12 Most Common Welding Problems
Quick Summary: This table shows the welding problems you’ll encounter most often, their primary causes, and immediate fixes. Print this for your shop wall – I’ve had a similar version taped to my welding table for over a decade.
| Problem | Primary Cause | Quick Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Porosity | Gas contamination, dirty metal | Clean metal, check gas flow |
| Spatter | Wrong voltage, dirty metal | Adjust voltage, reduce wire stickout |
| Undercut | Excessive amperage, fast travel | Reduce amperage, slow travel speed |
| Lack of Fusion | Insufficient heat, wrong angle | Increase amperage, adjust torch angle |
| Burn Through | Excessive heat, slow travel | Reduce amperage, increase travel speed |
| Cracks | Fast cooling, contamination | Preheat, clean material, use proper filler |
| Lack of Penetration | Low amperage, fast travel | Increase heat, slow down, bevel joint |
| Distortion | Excessive heat input | Use clamps, stagger welds, reduce heat |
| Slag Inclusions | Poor cleaning between passes | Grind clean, proper joint design |
| Convex Bead | Low heat, fast travel | Increase voltage, slow travel |
| Craters | Improper weld termination | Backfill at end, hold briefly |
| Overlap | Low amperage, slow travel | Increase heat, adjust travel speed |
How to Diagnose Weld Problems: A 5-Step System?
Before you start adjusting knobs, you need a systematic approach. I learned this the hard way after spending three hours chasing a porosity problem that was actually caused by a loose gas connection – something I could have found in 30 seconds with the right process.
Equipment vs. Technique: The most important distinction in weld troubleshooting. Equipment problems are machine-related (gas flow, wire feed, connections). Technique problems are operator-related (travel speed, torch angle, stickout). Always check equipment first – it’s easier to rule out.
- Visual Inspection: Examine the weld defect closely. Is it porosity (small holes), undercut (groove at edges), lack of fusion (unfilled areas), or something else? The type of defect points to specific causes.
- Check Equipment: Verify gas flow (15-20 CFH for MIG), check connections, inspect contact tip, examine drive rolls. Equipment issues cause about 30% of welding problems.
- Review Settings: Compare your machine settings to recommended parameters for your material thickness and wire diameter. Wrong settings cause 25% of defects.
- Analyze Technique: Consider your travel speed, torch angle, work angle, and stickout. Technique issues account for 45% of welding problems.
- Test and Verify: Make ONE adjustment at a time, then test. Never change multiple variables simultaneously or you’ll never know what fixed it.
Porosity: The #1 Welding Defect and How to Fix It
Porosity is caused by gas getting trapped in the solidifying weld metal, creating small holes or bubbles. The main causes are: inadequate shielding gas coverage, contaminated base metal (rust, paint, oil, moisture), excessive gas flow causing turbulence, wrong arc length, or drafty conditions.
Porosity appears as small holes or bubbles in the weld bead, looking like a sponge or Swiss cheese. I’ve seen this problem destroy more weld inspections than any other defect. The trapped gas weakens the weld significantly and can cause structural failure.
Porosity: Cavities or bubbles in solidified weld metal caused by gas entrapment during welding. These voids reduce the effective cross-sectional area of the weld, significantly decreasing its strength and fatigue resistance.
Causes of Porosity
Shielding gas issues are the leading cause. Insufficient flow, wrong gas type, or turbulence from excessive flow all allow air to contaminate the weld pool. I once spent two hours tracking down a porosity problem only to discover someone had bumped my gas flow from 18 CFH to 35 CFH, creating turbulent flow that pulled air into the weld.
Dirty metal is another major culprit. Mill scale, rust, paint, oil, and moisture all release gases when heated. For critical welds, I recommend grinding 1-2 inches back from the joint on both sides. This prep work takes five minutes and prevents hours of rework.
Arc length matters too. Excessively long arcs in MIG or TIG welding reduce gas protection and increase porosity risk. Keep your arc tight – about 3/8 inch for MIG and 1/8 inch for TIG.
How to Fix Porosity?
- Clean the metal thoroughly – Grind to bare metal at least 1 inch from the weld zone
- Check gas flow – Set to 15-20 CFH for MIG, 12-18 CFH for TIG
- Verify gas type – Use 75/25 argon/CO2 for steel, 100% argon for aluminum
- Reduce arc length – Keep torch closer to workpiece
- Block drafts – Use windscreens or work in sheltered area
- Check for leaks – Spray soapy water on gas connections to find leaks
- Reduce travel speed – Moving too fast can cause gas pocket entrapment
Spatter: Causes, Prevention, and Cleanup
Spatter consists of tiny molten metal droplets that spray around the weld pool instead of becoming part of the weld. It wastes filler metal, creates cleanup work, and can cause defects if it lands in critical areas. In production environments, excessive spatter costs significant time in post-weld cleaning.
To prevent weld spatter: adjust voltage settings to the proper range, clean base metal to remove contaminants, check shielding gas flow and reduce if excessive, reduce wire stickout to 3/8 inch or less, use anti-spatter spray on nozzle and workpiece, and ensure drive rolls are feeding smoothly without skipping.
What Causes Spatter?
Voltage that’s too high or too low both cause spatter. When voltage is too high, the arc becomes violent and throws metal out of the puddle. When too low, the wire dips into the puddle repeatedly, causing short-circuiting explosions.
Dirty metal contributes to spatter. Contaminants vaporize and expand, disrupting the arc and ejecting metal. I once fought a spatter problem on a structural job for three days before realizing our steel had an oily coating we couldn’t see but the arc certainly could.
Long wire stickout – the distance from contact tip to arc – increases electrical resistance and causes unstable arc conditions. Keep stickout at 3/8 inch for short-circuit MIG, up to 1/2 inch for spray transfer.
Spatter Prevention Tips
- Use proper voltage settings – Follow the chart on your welder door for your wire and material
- Keep stickout short – 3/8 inch or less for most MIG applications
- Clean metal thoroughly – Remove all rust, paint, oil, and mill scale
- Check gas flow – Excessive flow can cause turbulence-induced spatter
- Use quality wire – Cheap wire often has inconsistent diameter causing feeding issues
- Apply anti-spatter spray – Helps with cleanup on nozzle and workpiece
- Check drive roll tension – Too tight causes wire deformation, too loose causes skipping
Undercut: Understanding and Fixing This Groove Problem
Undercut appears as a groove or depression at the toe of the weld where the weld metal didn’t properly fuse with the base metal. It’s particularly dangerous because it creates a stress concentration point that can lead to cracking under load. Many welding inspectors reject parts immediately upon spotting undercut.
Undercut is caused by excessive amperage (heat) that melts away the base metal faster than filler metal can fill it, travel speed that’s too fast, improper torch angle pushing metal away from the joint, or an arc that’s too long. Fix it by reducing amperage, slowing travel speed, maintaining a 5-15 degree work angle, and using proper technique.
What Causes Undercut?
Excessive amperage is the primary cause. Too much heat melts the base metal edges faster than the weld pool can fill them back in. This is common with beginners who crank up the heat thinking it will improve penetration.
Travel speed that’s too fast also contributes. When you move too quickly, the weld pool doesn’t have time to wash into the toes properly. The metal solidifies before the puddle can flow outward.
Torch angle plays a bigger role than most people realize. Pushing too hard or holding the gun at too steep an angle directs the arc force away from the joint rather than into it. For MIG welding, maintain a slight drag angle of 5-15 degrees.
How to Fix Undercut?
- Reduce amperage/voltage – Lower your heat setting by 5-10%
- Slow travel speed – Give the weld pool time to flow into the toes
- Adjust torch angle – Use 5-15 degree drag angle, not steep push
- Reduce arc length – Keep arc tight for better directional control
- Use proper weave technique – Pause briefly at each side to allow fill
Check wire diameter – Larger wire requires more heat, smaller wire may reduce undercut
Lack of Fusion and Penetration: Hidden Dangers Explained
Lack of fusion occurs when the weld metal doesn’t properly bond with the base metal or between weld passes. Lack of penetration refers to the weld not extending through the full thickness of the joint. Both are serious structural defects that are often invisible on surface inspection.
Lack of Fusion vs. Penetration: Lack of fusion is a bonding problem – the weld metal sits beside the base metal but didn’t merge with it. Lack of penetration is a depth problem – the weld didn’t go deep enough into the joint. Both create weak points that can fail under load, but fusion defects are typically more dangerous because they’re harder to detect.
To fix lack of fusion and penetration: increase amperage for better melting, reduce travel speed to allow deeper penetration, improve joint preparation with proper bevel angles, maintain correct torch angle (direct heat into joint), ensure proper root gap, use appropriate filler metal diameter, and check that your welder has sufficient capacity for the material thickness.
Causes of Poor Fusion and Penetration
Insufficient heat is the leading cause. Low amperage settings simply can’t melt deep enough into the joint or properly fuse with the base metal. This is especially common when welding thick material with an undersized machine.
Travel speed that’s too fast prevents proper melting. The arc passes over the joint before enough heat can penetrate. I tell my students: “If you’re racing to finish, you’re probably not penetrating.”
Poor joint fitup contributes significantly. If there’s a gap that’s too large, the weld metal will bridge the surface without penetrating. If pieces are tight with no bevel on thick material, you can’t get penetration into the root.
Solutions for Better Fusion and Penetration
- Increase amperage – Raise heat to proper level for material thickness
- Slow travel speed – Allow more heat input into the joint
- Bevel thick materials – Create proper joint geometry for access
- Maintain correct angle – Direct arc force into the joint, not across it
- Use proper root opening – Gap should equal electrode diameter
- Choose right process – Consider TIG or Stick for critical structural welds
- Preheat thick materials – Reduces cooling rate and improves penetration
Burn Through: When Too Much Heat Ruins the Weld
Burn through happens when excessive heat melts completely through the base material, creating a hole. It’s most common on thin materials but can occur on any thickness when settings are wrong. The good news is that burn through is usually obvious – you see the hole immediately.
Burn through is caused by excessive amperage for the material thickness, travel speed that’s too slow, improper joint fitup with excessive gap, welding in a single pass when multiple passes are needed, or using too large of an electrode/filler. Fix it by reducing amperage, increasing travel speed, using smaller diameter wire, adding a copper backing bar, or switching to pulsed MIG/TIG for better heat control.
Preventing Burn Through
Material thickness is the primary consideration. 18-gauge steel (about 1/16 inch) requires significantly different settings than 1/4 inch plate. When welding thin materials, I recommend starting at the lowest recommended setting and increasing only as needed.
Use smaller diameter wire for thin materials. 0.023 inch wire gives much better control on 20-24 gauge steel compared to the more common 0.030 or 0.035 inch. The smaller wire requires less amperage and deposits less metal per inch of travel.
Consider pulsed MIG welding for thin materials. The pulsed arc alternates between high peak current for penetration and low background current for cooling, giving excellent heat control. I’ve successfully welded 24-gauge stainless with pulsed MIG that would be impossible with conventional short-circuit transfer.
Weld Cracks: Types, Causes, and Prevention
Cracking is perhaps the most serious welding defect because it indicates complete structural failure of the weld. Unlike porosity or undercut, which are localized defects, cracks can propagate through the entire weld and into the base metal, causing catastrophic failure.
Types of Weld Cracks
Hot cracks occur during solidification, typically at high temperatures (over 1000degF). They appear as longitudinal cracks along the weld centerline and are caused by low-melting-point impurities being pushed to the weld center as it solidifies.
Cold cracks (also called hydrogen cracking or delayed cracking) appear hours or even days after welding. They’re caused by hydrogen trapped in the weld combining with residual stress. Cold cracks are particularly insidious because they may not appear until the part is in service.
Crater cracks occur at the end of a weld when the arc is broken too abruptly. The center of the weld pool solidifies last, pulling apart as it cools and contracts. This is one of the easiest cracks to prevent with proper technique.
To prevent weld cracks: preheat materials to slow cooling and reduce stress, use low-hydrogen electrodes and keep them dry, maintain proper interpass temperature, avoid high-sulfur or high-phosphorus steels, fill craters before breaking arc, use proper joint design to reduce stress concentration, and consider post-weld heat treatment for critical applications.
Crack Prevention Strategies
Preheating is your best defense against cracking. Heating the base metal before welding (typically 150-500degF depending on material thickness and type) slows the cooling rate and reduces stress. For high-strength steels, I won’t even strike an arc without verifying preheat temperature.
Use low-hydrogen electrodes for critical welds. Store them in ovens, keep them in sealed containers when not in use, and never use electrodes that have been exposed to moisture. Hydrogen is the enemy of crack-free welds.
Always backfill craters. When ending a weld, pause briefly to fill the crater completely, then hold the torch in place for a second to allow proper solidification. This simple technique prevents most crater cracks.
Process-Specific Troubleshooting: MIG, TIG, and Stick Welding
Most welding guides focus exclusively on MIG problems, but each welding process has unique issues. After teaching all three processes for over a decade, I’ve learned that the underlying principles are similar but the specific failure points differ significantly.
MIG Welding Troubleshooting
MIG (GMAW) issues usually fall into three categories: wire feeding problems, gas-related defects, or voltage/wire speed imbalances. The wire feed system is the most common failure point.
Wire feeding problems: Birdnesting (tangled wire at drive rolls), burnback (wire fusing to contact tip), and erratic feeding are common MIG issues. Check drive roll tension – too tight deforms the wire, too loose causes slipping. Replace worn liners and ensure correct liner size for your wire diameter.
Gas-related defects: Porosity is the most common MIG gas problem. Check for leaks at all connections using soapy water. Verify flow rate with a flow meter – the gauges on regulators are notoriously inaccurate. Inspect the nozzle for spatter buildup that can disrupt gas coverage.
Voltage/wire speed balance: The relationship between voltage and wire feed speed determines your transfer type. For short-circuit transfer (common on home welders), lower voltages and moderate wire speeds create a crackling sound with minimal spatter. If you’re getting excessive spatter, try reducing voltage slightly and adjusting wire speed to maintain arc length.
| MIG Problem | Likely Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Birdnesting at drive rolls | Wrong drive roll type, excessive tension | Use knurled rolls for flux-cored, V-groove for solid, reduce tension |
| Burnback to contact tip | Tip too far from work, wrong tip size | Extend contact tip, match tip size to wire diameter |
| Erratic wire feed | Worn liner, kinked cable, dirty drive rolls | Replace liner, check cable path, clean drive rolls |
| Porous welds | Gas leak, wind, dirty metal | Check connections, block drafts, clean material |
TIG Welding Troubleshooting
TIG (GTAW) problems often relate to tungsten electrode condition, arc stability, or filler metal addition. The process is more technique-dependent than MIG, making it both more challenging and more rewarding when mastered.
Tungsten problems: Tungsten contamination occurs when the tungsten touches the weld pool or filler metal. This causes the arc to become unstable and wander. Use AC balance control to clean the tungsten periodically when welding aluminum. For DC welding, maintain a consistent 1/8 to 3/16 inch arc length and avoid touching the tungsten to the work.
Arc instability: A wandering or unstable TIG arc is usually caused by contaminated tungsten, incorrect sharpening angle, or poor grounding. Sharpen tungsten to a point for steel on DCEN – the included angle should be about 30 degrees. For aluminum AC, a slightly rounded tip works better than a sharp point.
Filler addition issues: Adding too much filler metal too fast drowges the weld and can cause lack of fusion. Adding too little creates a convex bead with poor wash-in. The filler should enter the weld pool at the leading edge, not directly into the arc.
| TIG Problem | Likely Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Tungsten contamination | Touched weld pool or filler | Redress tungsten on grinder, avoid touching pool |
| Wandering arc | Contaminated tungsten, poor ground | Replace tungsten, clean ground clamp area |
| Poor arc starts | Incorrect tungsten type, high frequency issue | Use lanthanated tungsten, check high frequency setting |
| Oxidized weld (gray/black) | Insufficient gas coverage, dirty metal | Increase post-flow, use gas lens, clean material |
Stick Welding Troubleshooting
Stick (SMAW) issues typically involve electrode performance, arc control, or slag removal. The process is more forgiving of dirty conditions but less forgiving of poor technique.
Electrode sticking: New stick welders often have the electrode stick to the work immediately upon striking an arc. This is usually caused by amperage that’s too low, a short arc length, or damp electrodes. Increase amperage by 5-10 amps and hold a slightly longer arc length – about 1/8 inch.
Slag inclusions: Slag trapped in the weld is common with stick welding, especially in vertical or overhead positions. Clean between passes completely, use proper joint preparation to allow access for slag removal, and consider using electrodes with better slag-release properties for out-of-position work.
Arc blow: The arc deflection that causes erratic weld beads is particularly problematic with stick welding DC. It’s caused by magnetic forces from the workpiece or ground connection. Switching to AC can eliminate arc blow, or try repositioning the ground clamp to a different location.
| Stick Problem | Likely Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Electrode sticking | Amperage too low, short arc | Increase amps, hold longer arc length |
| Slag inclusions | Poor cleaning between passes | Grind clean, use proper electrode angle |
| Arc blow | Magnetic forces, DC polarity | Switch to AC, relocate ground clamp |
| Porosity | Damp electrodes, long arc | Store rods in oven, maintain proper arc length |
Prevention Best Practices: Setting Up for Success
After seeing thousands of failed welds in my career, I’ve learned that prevention is dramatically faster than troubleshooting. The five minutes you spend on preparation save hours of rework. This is the checklist I give all my students before they ever strike an arc.
Material Preparation: The 60% Solution
I mentioned earlier that 60% of weld problems originate from material preparation, and I stand by that statistic. Clean metal welds easily; dirty metal welds poorly. Every joint should be cleaned to bare metal at least 1 inch back from the weld zone on both sides.
For steel, use a grinder with a clean grinding disc to remove mill scale, rust, and paint. Follow with acetone or alcohol to remove oils – never use a lubricant or cutting oil near the weld joint. For aluminum, use a dedicated stainless steel brush (never used on steel) and clean immediately before welding – aluminum forms an oxide layer within hours.
Equipment Setup Checklist
Before every welding session, I run through this quick equipment check. It takes three minutes and prevents countless problems:
- Check gas connections – Tighten all fittings, listen for hissing sounds
- Verify gas flow – Use a flow meter, set to 15-20 CFH for MIG
- Inspect contact tip – Replace if worn or oversized for your wire
- Check drive rolls – Clean grooves, verify correct type for your wire
- Test ground clamp – Clean contact area, ensure tight connection
- Verify polarity – DCEP for most MIG and Stick, DCEN for TIG steel
- Check wire spool – Ensure it feeds freely without binding
Technique Fundamentals Worth Mastering
Good welding technique is built on a few fundamentals that apply across all processes. Travel speed should generally maintain a weld pool that’s about 2-3 times the diameter of your electrode or wire. Torch angle should be 5-15 degrees into the direction of travel (drag technique) for most MIG and Stick applications.
Arc length varies by process: 3/8 inch for MIG short-circuit, 1/8 inch for TIG, and electrode diameter for Stick. Maintain consistent distance – your arc length shouldn’t vary by more than 1/8 inch during the weld.
Joint preparation matters more than most people realize. Proper bevel angles, root openings, and fit-up make welding dramatically easier. For material over 1/4 inch thick, I won’t even attempt a weld without proper bevel preparation.
When to Consider Alternative Methods?
Sometimes welding isn’t the best joining method for your project. For certain materials like plastics, alternative joining methods including adhesives, mechanical fasteners, or specialized plastic welding techniques may produce better results. Understanding when welding isn’t the answer is just as important as knowing how to troubleshoot weld problems.
Frequently Asked Questions
What causes porosity in welding?
Porosity is caused by gas getting trapped in the solidifying weld metal. Main causes include inadequate shielding gas coverage, contaminated base metal (rust, paint, oil, moisture), excessive gas flow causing turbulence, wrong arc length, or drafty conditions that disrupt gas coverage.
How do you fix lack of fusion in welding?
Fix lack of fusion by increasing amperage for better melting, reducing travel speed to allow proper fusion, improving torch angle to direct heat into the joint, ensuring proper joint preparation with bevels, checking that joint fitup is correct, and verifying you’re using appropriate filler metal for the application.
What causes undercut in welds?
Undercut is caused by excessive amperage that melts away base metal faster than filler metal can fill it, travel speed that’s too fast, improper torch angle that directs metal away from the joint, or an arc that’s too long. The heat is washing metal out of the joint toes before it can be replaced.
Why does my weld have cracks?
Weld cracks are caused by hydrogen contamination (moisture in electrodes or base metal), excessive residual stress from rapid cooling, high sulfur or phosphorus content in the steel, improper joint design creating stress concentration, or ending the weld without proper crater filling. Hot cracks occur during solidification, cold cracks appear hours or days later.
How to prevent weld spatter?
Prevent spatter by using correct voltage settings for your wire and material, keeping wire stickout under 3/8 inch, cleaning base metal thoroughly to remove contaminants, checking shielding gas flow and reducing if excessive, using quality filler wire with consistent diameter, and applying anti-spatter spray to the nozzle and workpiece.
What causes burn through in welding?
Burn through is caused by using excessive amperage for the material thickness, traveling too slowly which deposits too much heat, improper joint fitup with excessive gaps, trying to weld thick material in a single pass instead of multiple passes, or using filler wire/electrode that’s too large for the material.