Welding Merit Badge

Safety, Salesmanship, Scholarship, Scouting Heritage, Scuba Diving, Sculpture, Shotgun Shooting, Skating, Small-Boat Sailing, Snow Sports, Soil & Water Conservation, Space Exploration, Sports, Stamp Collecting, Surveying, Textile, Theater, Traffic Safety, Truck Transportation, Veterinary Medicine, Water Sports, Weather, Whitewater, Wilderness Survival, Wood Carving, and Woodwork.

Moderators: Site Admin, Moderators

Re: Welding Merit Badge

Postby FrankJ » Thu Jan 12, 2012 10:52 am

OK ... I will bite. :D What basic power tools can't scouts use?



The GTA references unpublished provisions in the G2SS that will require eagle projects to follow OSHA workplace guidelines. (if they are ever published) OSHA essentially prohibits under 18s from construction work sites & power tools except under very narrow situations. A case of something that makes sense in one situation and trying to apply it to something different.

The welding merit badge is not an Eagle Project so different rules would apply.

Regardless of what is required, youth using power tools, saws & welders need to be closely supervised by someone qualified & mature.
Frank J.
Venturing Crew Adviser, Assistant Scout Master, Renegade Merit Badge Counselor
Owl-2 WB 92-49
Foothills District Atlanta Area Council
I never teach my pupils. I only attempt to provide the conditions in which they can learn.--Albert Einstein
FrankJ
Gold Palm
 
Posts: 1640
Joined: Fri Jan 13, 2006 1:25 am
Location: Atlanta Area Council Foothills District

Re: Welding Merit Badge

Postby kwildman » Thu Jan 12, 2012 4:30 pm

razor_strop wrote:
kwildman wrote:OK ... I will bite. :D What basic power tools can't scouts use? I must be missing something because I cant find anything in the Guide 2 Safe Scouting that prohibits basic power tools...


Discussion on Scouts using power tools on Eagle projects is found here: http://www.meritbadge.net/phpbb/viewtopic.php?f=48&t=3900&st=0&sk=t&sd=a&start=40



Amazing...The notes on the new ESSPW say that the G2SS will be revised (its not yet). Just another example of the continued dumbing down of a great program. They have taken shop class out of most schools curriculum so where are young men supposed to learn these skills? Garbage like this really makes me wonder where we will be in 5 years? Climbing/rappelling, rifle, shotgun, whitewater, welding, scuba and many other activities all involve inherent risks to life and limb. They are really sending mixed signals when BSA comes out with ATV programs for selected camps when it is in direct violation of their own guidance.
No one can pass through life, any more than he can pass through a bit of country, without leaving tracks behind, and those tracks may often be helpful to those coming after him in finding their way. - Lord Baden-Powell
kwildman
Bronze Palm
 
Posts: 612
Joined: Tue May 06, 2008 9:20 am
Location: Simon Kenton Council

Re: Welding Merit Badge

Postby smtroop168 » Tue Jan 24, 2012 4:10 pm

here are the Welding MB requirements that were posted on scouter.com forum. I haven't seen the 2012 book yet:

1. Do the following:
(a) Explain to your counselor the hazards you are most likely to encounter
while welding, and what you should do to anticipate, help prevent, mitigate,
or lessen these hazards.
(b) Show that you know first aid for, and the prevention of, injuries or illnesses
that could occur while welding, including electrical shock, eye injuries, burns,
fume inhalation, dizziness, skin irritation, and exposure to hazardous chemicals,
including filler metals and welding gases.
2. Do the following:
(a) With your counselor, discuss general safety precautions and Material
Safety Data Sheets related to welding. Explain the importance of the MSDS.
(b) Describe the appropriate safety gear and clothing that must be worn when
welding. Then, present yourself properly dressed for welding—in protective
equipment, clothing, and footwear.
(c) Explain and demonstrate the proper care and storage of welding equipment,
tools, and protective clothing and footwear.
3. Explain the terms welding, electrode, slag, and oxidation. Describe the welding
process, how heat is generated, what kind of filler metal is added (if any), and
what protects the molten metal from the atmosphere.
4. Name the different mechanical and thermal cutting methods. Choose one
method and describe how to use the process. Discuss one advantage and one
limitation of this process.
5. Do the following:
(a) Select two welding processes, and make a list of the different components
of the equipment required for each process. Discuss one advantage and one
limitation for each process.
(b) Choose one welding process. Set up the process you have chosen, including
gas regulators, work clamps, cables, filler materials, and equipment settings.
Have your counselor inspect and approve the area for the welding process you
have chosen.221
6. After successfully completing requirements 1 through 5, use the equipment
you prepared for the welding process in 5b to do the following:
(a) Using a metal scribe or soapstone, sketch your initial onto a metal plate,
and weld a bead on the plate following the pattern of your initial.
(b) Cover a small plate (approximately 3” x 3” x ¼”) with weld beads side
by side.
(c) Tack two plates together in a square groove butt joint.
(d) Weld the two plates together from 6c on both sides.
(e) Tack two plates together in a T joint, have your counselor inspect it, then
weld a T joint with fillet weld on both sides.
(f) Tack two plates together in a lap joint, have your counselor inspect it,
then weld a lap joint with fillet weld on both sides.
7. Do the following:
(a) Find out about three career opportunities in the welding industry. Pick
one and find out the education, training, and experience required for this
profession. Discuss this with your counselor, and explain why the profession
might interest you.
(b) Discuss the role of the American Welding Society in the welding professio
"Providing Quality Info One Paragraph At A Time"
smtroop168
Silver Palm
 
Posts: 2283
Joined: Wed Jan 17, 2007 1:37 pm
Location: New Birth of Freedom Council Carlisle PA

Re: Welding Merit Badge

Postby Reasonable Rascal » Tue Jan 24, 2012 7:28 pm

The MB worksheet link on the Wiki leads to a 2001 version of the basic 6 knots. Otherwise very good.

"Houston, we have progress!"

RR
Boys can save lives when Scouting first saves them.
Reasonable Rascal
Star
 
Posts: 104
Joined: Sun Apr 18, 2010 12:28 am
Location: Bullhead City - Las Vegas Area Council

Re: Welding Merit Badge

Postby RWSmith » Wed Jan 25, 2012 12:21 pm

Reasonable Rascal wrote:The MB worksheet link on the Wiki leads to a 2001 version of the basic 6 knots.
Fixed... for now.
RWSmith
Site Admin
 
Posts: 1625
Joined: Wed Aug 11, 2004 8:45 am
Location: Mecklenburg County Council

Welding start date

Postby SoCal76 » Tue Jan 31, 2012 6:23 pm

Scouting.org

http://www.scouting.org/scoutsource/Boy ... lding.aspx

has posted the merit badge requirements with the following note:

Official launch date and earn date to be the end of Feb. or early March. Check back here for the latest information.
Last edited by RWSmith on Tue Jan 31, 2012 11:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: This post "Moved" to here by Admin.
SoCal76
Star
 
Posts: 67
Joined: Thu Jan 28, 2010 8:25 pm
Location: San Gabriel Valley Council

Re: Welding Merit Badge

Postby Hotforged_ccb » Wed Feb 15, 2012 10:53 am

The news I've found on the website for Great Lakes Council, is that the Welding Merit Badge becomes effective on Feb 24th.
"New Merit Badge Announced ~ The BSA has announced the addition of the Welding merit badge. Scouts can begin working on this merit badge at the end of February, when the pamphlet is available online and in Scout shops. The official earn date is 2/24/12.

I have been doing basic blacksmithing demos for Great Lakes Council at the Rendezvous {2008 & 2010}, and council summer camps, to provide hot forged items [based on the MB requirements] for their newer latrines since 2004. It is my way of giving back to the camps. I'm also a current Metalwork MB Counselor, who has welding knowledge and experience from both college and jobs, and own my own arc welder. If I don't have it, I make it.

I try to make sure that there is two-deep Leadership {YPT} on hand for ANY activity involving youth. Two sets on knowledgeable eyes {or more} are better than one, when dealing in Industrial Arts of any kind. Safety is Job 1. The motto is "nothing added and nothing taken away from the MB.
However, the welding MB may eventually require prerequisites to safety and the dangers involved before trying it out. Just an opinion, mind you.

If the scout has the want-to attitude to get started in something that should be considered a life skill or trade like welding and other Industrial Arts, we should provide a safe and positive approach to something that could lead to earning a living at.
CCB_Blacksmith
Hotforged_ccb
Scout
 
Posts: 1
Joined: Wed Feb 15, 2012 9:04 am
Location: Fraser, Michigan

Re: Welding Merit Badge

Postby lambeausam » Thu Mar 01, 2012 10:39 am

My boys picked up their copy of the book last night. Now they need help finding a counselor! I think the graphic for the badge turned out great.
lambeausam
Life
 
Posts: 133
Joined: Wed Feb 22, 2006 12:36 pm
Location: Chicago

Previous

Return to Merit Badges -- S-Z

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests