View Full Version : Welding Projects for Little Kids
Laiky
06-05-2008, 09:36 PM
I have a 10 year old nephew and an 11 year old son of a friend. They are asking questions about welding. I would like to find a simple project that i can do with them that will make them feel like they accomplished something. I was thinking maybe a Mythbusters style name plate. I could plasma cut out the letters ahead of time and have them tack them back inplace with the MIG? maybe a little to much of me doing it and not enough of them. What do you guys think? They have no real welding or tool using experience. Any other ideas are welcome.
welderman23
06-05-2008, 09:40 PM
nope i got no ideas ,but i think its good that your getting the rugrats invovled
They could weld their name with mig on a plate. I'd hand them the plasma and let them cut it out while you help. I would drill some starter holes possibly to prevent the splash as you pierce a plate if you have them cut the name from a plate in negative.
Weld a pencil holder from some pipe? U shaped napkin holder? Book ends? Candle holder or one of those cut up can lanterns that hold a candle?
Laiky
06-06-2008, 06:41 AM
Thanks DSW i think i may be able to run with one of those ideas. They have been asking the "can you show me how to weld questions" but they of course have no idea whats involved. When the oppertunity presents itself, i would like to have something in mind to show them.
kcstott
06-06-2008, 08:45 AM
When I was helping my dad out at an early age. He would give me one or two easy tasks to do while working on a bigger project. He started me off welding .062 1X2" tubing that he had already laid out and tacked up.
My suggestion start them out with a mig or an O/A they are much more forgiving. Get them working on anything you can. It doesn't need to be a project especially for them although that would be nice. let them do some of the grunt work.
I did a lot of hold this and get that but every once in awhile it was "hey weld this joint. Or braze this." just getting them involved will be a big kick for them.
Then you could come up with a supervised project.
Bike rack, RC car display stand, Basketball hoop. Common stuff they would use.
dabar39
06-06-2008, 08:47 AM
Here's a project that I posted awhile back that my great nephew made , he just turned 7. Anyways, he is always bugging his mom to come visit me so he can make stuff. I screwed up and erased his last project out of the camera before it was downloaded but he made a plant hanger for his mom that turned out rather well for a kid that just turned 7.
http://www.millerwelds.com/resources/communities/mboard/showthread.php?t=12666
Big_Eddy
06-06-2008, 10:41 AM
My 10 yr old son is into horses - he made this for the arena door. More time bending than welding - but he did it all himself.
engnerdan
06-06-2008, 12:50 PM
Keep the ideas coming, I would love to get my step daughter involved (she loves working on projects together) but I have yet to do any metal working with her. Plus this is the perfect reason to get the new hood I want, so we each can wear one as I teach her how to weld.
-Dan
hellowyo
06-06-2008, 01:49 PM
Hello!
I am a High School welding teacher, and was thinking about doing a welding camp at my school sometime during the summer for late elementary or middle school age kids... You guys have inspired me!
Nice project ideas... a plasma cut name, the mom plate, some horse shoe stuff like a napkin holder etc. Small projects that could be done in a day or two...
Thanks for the ideas guys! Any more very simple projects come to mind?
Anyway thanks for the help!
Burnt hands
06-09-2008, 07:13 AM
Hope this is not too complicated.
I welded this up in about 2 hours from scraps I had on hand.
The head moves around.
Painting it took longer than the welding phase.
Other ideas:
Turtle, frog, fish snake, birds, cat, dog , flower cut-outs from flat plate
wind chimes, house number sign,
The fun part is using whatever is on hand and having fun.
in the adult-ed night course on welding that i took i made
a bunch of nameplates
- took a 2x5 piece of 12ga (i think...) and welded (mig)
a name into it,
- welded that piece to another, making an inverted T,
with the name on the vertical piece
and gave 'em out as christmas presents to those that
would enjoy 'em. (i even gave one to my boss, who let
me bug out of work an hour or two early to take the course :-)
the really good part was that it was a project where
neatness, technique, wire-speed, etc, etc, all really
counted.
it probably gave me a whole lot better feel
for how to mig than running random beads on
coupons or joining two pieces of scrap together.
it was a great project
just don't let the kids get frustrated -- it can be hard to
write when you can barely see what you're doing.
f
welder_guy
06-09-2008, 11:53 AM
Now I am 14 years old. I started when I was 12. I first started with a plasma cutter and a spot welder. I made all sorts of little sheet-metal dragons and stuff like that
Weldtoride
06-26-2008, 09:59 PM
Where do you live? I ask because as a high school shop teacher, a popular no-to-low cost beginners' project for my students was a mud scraper-the sort that is shoved into the ground at a handy location. Anyone who lives around mud, seasonal mud or who is an avid gardener appreciates boot/shoe scrapers. A piece of scrap plate with a couple of pipe scraps or bar stock scraps welded to each end to stick into the ground gives practice with fillet welds, and then it can be personalized with the farm/ranch/family name shown on the plate with practice beads. Some kids put their street address on it and displayed it in front. A variation was to bend the pipe or barstock into a loop over the top so the scraper could be easily moved from location to location. My experience is that kids love to write things with weld beads, and it sure beats the monotonous plates full of practice beads I remember doing. I admit hey did have their purpose, but if you are dealing with brand new welders, chances are they want to MAKE SOMETHING and not just turn in an assignment. Good Luck, Mark
arthur
06-29-2008, 12:15 PM
Maybe thet...:)
http://img140.imageshack.us/img140/1064/dscf2455bj9.jpg
http://img140.imageshack.us/img140/342/dscf2454nc3.jpg
http://img140.imageshack.us/img140/9334/dscf2453ol1.jpg
Emrlddvr
07-01-2008, 08:20 PM
we just finished a camp for under 16 yr olds. 1 week, will be 2 weeks next yr. We started them doing overlays on a 2.375 diameter pipe about 4 inches long. Do the overlays longetudnally not around the pipe. Cut the guys some caps to weld on both ends and have them weld a spiral on the faces. The finished product looks like a miniature fire log! We the cut a small double blade ax in a cnc plaz to weld on the side to look like ut had been plased during chopping. Also we had Solidworks help sponsor the camp. The students all recieved a free copy of Solidworks.
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