Weld - Puddle

If you’ve ever wondered how the floor pans are attached to the frame of your car, or how a sheet metal bracket is secured to a hollow tube, you’ve likely seen a puddle weld. Here is your complete guide to what it is, why it’s used, and how to do it right. A puddle weld is a method of joining two pieces of metal—usually where one piece overlaps the other—by melting through a hole in the top layer to fuse it to the bottom layer.

Those little circles of steel aren't spots; they are puddles of strength holding your world together. Do you have a horror story of a plug weld that failed, or a trick for getting them perfect every time? Let us know in the comments below! puddle weld

When most people picture a weld, they imagine a long, glowing bead tracing a seam between two plates of metal. But in the worlds of auto manufacturing, shipbuilding, and heavy fabrication, there is another, less glamorous but equally critical player: the puddle weld (also known as a plug weld or a rosette weld). If you’ve ever wondered how the floor pans