Free Online MIG (Flux-Cored) Welding Calculator

Free Online MIG (Flux-Cored) Welding Calculator

Free Online MIG (Flux-Cored) Welding Calculator

Gas-Shielded Flux Cored FCAW-G

Self-Shielded Flux Cored FCAW-S

All suggested settings are approximate starting points. Test welds should be performed and adjusted for joint design, fit-up, position and stickout. Wire feed speed is a starting value only and can be fine-tuned while welding. For gas-shielded FCAW, CO₂ gives deeper penetration but may run hot on thinner steel; 75% Argon / 25% CO₂ typically runs smoother with less spatter.

Free Online MIG (Flux-Cored) Welding Calculator – User Guide

Flux-cored welding is widely used for structural steel, outdoor work, and high-deposition welding where penetration and productivity matter. However, correct settings are critical. Too much voltage, incorrect wire, or wrong shielding can lead to excessive spatter, poor fusion, or weld defects.

The Free Online MIG (Flux-Cored) Welding Calculator by UpWeld helps you quickly determine reliable starting settings for flux-cored welding based on steel thickness and wire type, so you can set up your machine with confidence.

What This Flux-Cored Welding Calculator Does

This calculator provides practical starting values for:

  • Flux-cored wire type and diameter

  • Wire feed speed (starting range)

  • Amperage range

  • Voltage range

  • Shielding gas (if required)

It covers both major flux-cored processes:

  • Gas-Shielded Flux-Cored (FCAW-G)

  • Self-Shielded Flux-Cored (FCAW-S)

All values are based on industry-standard operating ranges commonly used in fabrication shops and field welding.

Step 1: Select the Material

Flux-cored welding is primarily used for steel, and this calculator is intentionally focused on steel only. This ensures more accurate and realistic recommendations rather than generic settings.

Steel flux-cored welding is commonly used in:

  • Structural fabrication

  • Construction and bridges

  • Heavy equipment repair

  • Outdoor and windy environments

Step 2: Select Material Thickness

Choose the thickness of the steel you are welding. Thickness directly affects:

  • Required heat input

  • Wire diameter selection

  • Voltage and amperage range

The calculator includes common plate thicknesses from 3/32 inch up to 5/8 inch, covering light fabrication through heavy structural work.

Understanding the Calculator Results

After selecting thickness, the calculator displays two separate result sections.

Gas-Shielded Flux-Cored Welding (FCAW-G)

Gas-shielded flux-cored welding uses an external shielding gas and offers smoother arc characteristics and better weld appearance.

Typical features:

  • Wires such as E71T-1 or E71T-9

  • Uses 75% Argon / 25% CO₂ or 100% CO₂

  • Higher deposition rates

  • Cleaner welds compared to self-shielded wires

The calculator shows:

  • Recommended wire diameter

  • Starting wire feed speed

  • Amperage range

  • Voltage range

  • Shielding gas type

Self-Shielded Flux-Cored Welding (FCAW-S)

Self-shielded flux-cored welding does not require external gas, making it ideal for outdoor and field work.

Typical features:

  • Wires such as E71T-11

  • No shielding gas required

  • More spatter than gas-shielded FCAW

  • Excellent for windy conditions

The calculator shows:

  • Recommended wire diameter

  • Starting wire feed speed

  • Amperage range

  • Voltage range

  • Confirmation that no external gas is needed

How Accurate Are These Settings?

The values provided by this calculator are realistic starting points, not machine-specific presets. They are suitable for:

  • Shop fabrication

  • Structural welding

  • Repair and maintenance

  • Training and reference use

Actual welding results may vary depending on:

  • Machine output and duty cycle

  • Joint design and fit-up

  • Welding position

  • Stick-out and travel speed

Always perform a short test weld and fine-tune settings before production welding.

Practical Flux-Cored Welding Tips

  • Maintain correct stick-out (usually longer than solid-wire MIG)

  • Flux-cored welding runs hotter than MIG solid wire

  • Use proper joint preparation on thicker material

  • Expect more spatter with self-shielded wires

  • Adjust the voltage first, then the wire feed speed

Who Should Use This Calculator?

This calculator is useful for:

  • Fabricators and structural welders

  • Field welders working outdoors

  • Beginners learning flux-cored welding

  • Professionals switching wire sizes or thicknesses

  • Anyone needing fast, reliable setup guidance

The UpWeld Free Online MIG (Flux-Cored) Welding Calculator is designed to save time, reduce guesswork, and help welders start with confidence. While experience and testing are always important, starting with correct baseline settings makes welding safer, faster, and more consistent.

Always adjust settings based on real welding conditions and machine behavior.