MIG Welding Wire — Solid Wire, Flux-Cored Wire, and Specialty Filler Metals for Every Application
MIG welding wire is the consumable at the center of every GMAW and FCAW weld. Every spool you buy determines the mechanical properties of the finished joint, the cleanliness of the weld bead, the spatter level you'll clean up, and the compliance of the weld deposit with any applicable code or standard. WeldingMart stocks over 220 wire SKUs from Lincoln Electric, Hobart, and Harris — the brands professional welders have built careers around. Orders placed before 3 PM Central Time ship same-day from Appleton, WI, and free freight applies at $99.
This hub covers the full welding wire landscape: solid wire vs. flux-cored wire, how to select wire diameter and alloy for your base metal, shielding gas requirements, wire specifications that matter, and how to get consistent results from spool one to spool ten thousand. Use the sections below to narrow your choice before adding to your cart.
What Is MIG Welding Wire?
MIG welding wire — formally called electrode wire or filler wire — is a continuously fed metal electrode that serves two simultaneous functions: it carries the welding current to the arc, and it melts to become part of the weld deposit. In GMAW (Gas Metal Arc Welding), the wire is solid metal protected from atmospheric contamination by an externally supplied shielding gas. In FCAW (Flux-Cored Arc Welding), the wire is tubular — hollow metal with a flux-mineral core that generates its own protective slag, either with or without supplemental external gas.
The welding wire classification printed on every spool tells you the alloy chemistry, tensile strength, position capability, and required shielding conditions. For mild steel solid wire, the industry standard is AWS ER70S-6 — an electrode-rod combination wire capable of 70,000 PSI tensile strength in the as-welded condition, solid form, with high silicon and manganese deoxidizer content for tolerance of light mill scale and surface contamination. Understanding the classification lets you verify that the wire on your machine matches your code, your procedure, and your base metal before you strike an arc.
Wire diameter and wire type interact with your welding machine, your shielding gas setup, and the thickness of the metal you're welding. Getting these four variables aligned is the foundation of consistent, quality welds. The sections below walk through each decision point systematically.
How to Choose the Right MIG Welding Wire
Step 1 — Match Wire Alloy to Base Metal
The alloy of the wire must be compatible with the alloy of the base metal. Mismatched filler metal is one of the most consequential errors in welding — a joint can look perfect and still fail under load or impact if the filler metal was wrong. The standard alloy pairings are:
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Mild steel (A36, A572, A500): ER70S-6 solid wire or E71T-1 gas-shielded FCAW wire
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Low-alloy structural steel (A992, A913): ER70S-6 solid or E71T-1 FCAW with AWS D1.1 pre-qualified procedure
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304/316 stainless steel: ER308L, ER309L (for dissimilar joints), or ER316L solid wire
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Aluminum (6061, 5052): ER4043 (general purpose, good fluidity) or ER5356 (higher strength, anodize-friendly)
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Chrome-moly (P91, P22): ER80S-D2 or matched low-hydrogen FCAW wire per ASME B31.3 requirements
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Silicon bronze (copper alloy brazing): ERCuSi-A for brazing galvanized, zinc-coated, or dissimilar-metal joints without melting the base metal
Step 2 — Select Wire Diameter for Machine and Material Thickness
Wire diameter must be matched to both the machine's drive roll capacity and the thickness of the base metal being welded. Using wire that is too large for thin material causes burn-through; wire that is too small for heavy plate requires excessive passes and machine settings outside the optimal operating range.
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0.023" / 0.6mm: Sheet metal, 22–16 gauge, hobby and light-duty machines (MIG 140, 180 class)
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0.030" / 0.8mm: 18 gauge to 3/16", the standard for entry-level machines and light fabrication
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0.035" / 0.9mm: The most popular all-around diameter — covers 14 gauge to 1/2" on mid-range and industrial machines (Lincoln Power MIG 215, 256, 360MP)
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0.045" / 1.2mm: Heavy plate, structural work, high-deposition production welding, semiautomatics and wire feeders
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5/64" / 2.0mm and larger: Submerged arc and FCAW production applications, large-format wire feeders
Step 3 — Confirm Shielding Gas Compatibility
Solid GMAW wire always requires external shielding gas. Self-shielded FCAW wire requires no external gas. Gas-shielded FCAW wire requires external gas plus uses the internal flux. The most common gas blends:
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75% Ar / 25% CO₂ (C25): The most popular blend for mild steel solid wire. Stable arc, low spatter, good penetration, suitable for short-circuit and spray transfer modes.
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100% CO₂: Higher penetration and lower cost than C25, but increased spatter. Common in high-deposition structural FCAW-G applications.
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100% Argon: Required for aluminum wire. No exceptions — any CO₂ in the mix causes porosity in aluminum welds.
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Tri-mix (He/Ar/CO₂) or 98/2 Ar/CO₂: Standard for stainless steel wire to maintain corrosion resistance in the weld deposit.
Self-shielded FCAW wire (E71T-11, E71T-GS, Innershield NR-211-MP) requires no gas — this is the right choice for outdoor work, site welding in drafty conditions, and any application where running a shielding gas cylinder is impractical.
Step 4 — Choose Spool Size for Your Volume
Wire comes in spool sizes ranging from 1 lb trial rolls to 44 lb production spools and 500–1,000 lb drums. Match spool size to your production volume. A 1 or 2 lb trial spool lets you evaluate a new wire type or diameter before committing to a large quantity. An 8" 10–25 lb spool is standard for most shop welders. A 33–44 lb spool minimizes change-out time for production runs. Verify your machine's spool hub diameter before ordering — most mid-range machines accept 4" and 8" hub spools; some larger industrial feeders take 12" or 16".
Top Wire Products at WeldingMart — By Use Case
General Mild Steel Fabrication: Lincoln Electric SuperArc L-56 (ER70S-6)
The Lincoln Electric SuperArc L-56 is one of the best-selling MIG wires in North America, and it's the wire that most professional fabricators return to by default when welding mild steel. It's an ER70S-6 formulation with high silicon and manganese deoxidizer content, which gives it exceptional tolerance for light rust and mill scale compared to ER70S-3 and ER70S-2 formulations. The SuperArc L-56's precision layer-wound spooling means the wire feeds consistently from the first turn of the spool to the last — no tangles, no bird-nesting, no erratic arc caused by wire cast variation. It runs equally well in short-circuit transfer for thin gauge and spray transfer for heavier plate on machines that support the operating range. Available in 0.023" through 0.045" in spool sizes from 2 lb to 44 lb.
Field Welding and Outdoor Work: Lincoln Electric Innershield NR-211-MP
The Lincoln Innershield NR-211-MP is a self-shielded FCAW wire (E71T-11) that requires no external gas coverage — making it the first choice for welding outdoors, in the field, on a windy farm, or anywhere that running a gas cylinder is impractical or impossible. It runs on DCEN (electrode negative) polarity, all-position capability, and deposits a flat, easily cleaned weld with good penetration on mild steel up to 5/8" in a single pass. The NR-211-MP also runs on many machines originally sold as "gasless" welding kits — if you bought a wire welder and want to run it without gas, this is the wire.
High-Production Structural Welding: Lincoln Electric Outershield 71M (E71T-1M)
For production structural welding on medium to heavy plate, the Lincoln Outershield 71M (gas-shielded FCAW-G) delivers substantially higher deposition rates than solid wire with excellent mechanical properties and easy slag removal. It runs with 75% Ar / 25% CO₂ shielding gas, all-position capability, and meets the impact toughness requirements needed for most structural steel applications under AWS D1.1. The FCAW-G process on heavy material is significantly faster than solid wire for fillet welds on plate — this is the production choice when cycle time matters.
General Mild Steel and Light Fabrication: Hobart Solid and Flux-Core Wire
Hobart wire provides strong value-to-performance for shops and fabricators who need reliable results without premium pricing. Hobart's solid mild steel wire (ER70S-6) runs cleanly on standard machine settings and is a practical choice for agricultural equipment repair, general maintenance welding, and light structural work. Hobart Fabshield self-shielded flux-core wire is known for consistent arc starts and easy slag removal in field conditions. If you're stocking a shop with a mix of Lincoln machines and budget constraints, Hobart is the proven secondary brand on WeldingMart's approved supplier list.
Stainless and Specialty Applications: Harris Stainless and Silicon Bronze Wire
Harris Products Group is a leading manufacturer of specialty filler metals including stainless steel MIG wire (ER308L, ER309L, ER316L) and silicon bronze wire (ERCuSi-A). Harris stainless MIG wire is manufactured to precise chemistry tolerances critical for maintaining corrosion resistance in food service, pharmaceutical, and marine fabrication applications. Harris silicon bronze wire is the standard choice for braze-welding galvanized steel and joining dissimilar metals where the base metal must not be melted — the silicon bronze flows below the melting point of the steel base metal, creating a strong brazed joint without the zinc fume hazard of welding directly through galvanizing.
MIG Welding Wire Specifications Guide
| Parameter |
What It Controls |
Typical Range |
| AWS Classification |
Alloy, strength, position, shielding requirements |
ER70S-6, E71T-1C, ER308L, ER4043, etc. |
| Wire Diameter |
Amperage range, deposition rate, base metal thickness range |
0.023" to 1/16" (0.6–1.6mm) |
| Tensile Strength |
Minimum weld deposit tensile per AWS classification |
70,000–120,000 PSI (E70 through E120) |
| Diffusible Hydrogen (H4/H8/H16) |
Cold cracking susceptibility; preheat requirement |
ER70S-6 ≤ 5 mL/100g; H4 FCAW ≤ 4 mL/100g |
| Spool Weight |
Production run length between changeovers |
1 lb (trial) to 44 lb (production) |
| Shielding Gas |
Arc stability, spatter, penetration profile, edge quality |
C25, 100% CO₂, 100% Ar, tri-mix |
| Polarity |
Arc characteristics; specified per wire type |
DCEP (solid, FCAW-G); DCEN (most FCAW-S) |
| Position Rating |
Whether wire can be used out-of-position |
F, H, V, OH (1 = all-position; 2 = flat/horizontal only) |
Compatible Equipment and Accessories
Welding wire works as part of a complete system. The following WeldingMart collections carry the machines and accessories that complete your wire setup:
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MIG Welders — Lincoln Electric Power MIG and Weld-Pak series, from hobby 120V machines to industrial multi-process units. Match your wire diameter to the machine's drive roll and liner specifications before ordering.
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Industrial Wire Feed Welders — Lincoln LN-25 PRO, LN-25X, and MAXsa semi-automatic wire feeders for production welding and boom-mounted applications where a standard push-pull gun setup isn't practical.
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MIG Contact Tips — Contact tip bore diameter must match wire diameter exactly. We stock Lincoln Electric Magnum PRO and Copper Plus contact tips in all standard sizes. Replace tips at the first sign of elongation or spatter buildup.
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Welding Gas Regulators & Pressure Control — Harris flowmeter regulators for Argon, CO₂, and mixed gas cylinders. The regulator controls the flow rate that protects your weld pool — don't pair a premium wire with an undersized or worn regulator.
Wire Storage Best Practices
Wire that is stored correctly performs correctly. Surface moisture on solid wire introduces hydrogen into the weld deposit and causes porosity. FCAW wire with moisture-absorbed flux creates the same problem with the additional risk of hydrogen-induced cracking in high-strength applications. Follow these guidelines:
- Store wire indoors at stable room temperature (65–85°F) with relative humidity below 60%
- Keep wire in the original sealed plastic wrap until ready to use
- Once opened, reseal with plastic wrap or store in a heated storage cabinet in humid climates
- Rotate stock — use wire purchased first before opening new spools
- Light surface rust on solid wire (wipeable with a clean rag) is acceptable for non-critical applications; heavy pitting or rust that flakes into the liner is a replacement condition
- Most manufacturers recommend using wire within 12–24 months of manufacture date stamped on the spool label
Frequently Asked Questions — MIG Welding Wire
- What is the most common MIG wire for mild steel?
- ER70S-6 solid wire is the industry standard for mild steel GMAW. It runs on 75% Ar / 25% CO₂ shielding gas, produces clean low-spatter beads, and tolerates light mill scale and surface contamination better than ER70S-3. Lincoln Electric SuperArc L-56 is the most widely specified brand of ER70S-6 in North American fabrication shops. Hobart ER70S-6 is a strong value alternative for general maintenance and light fabrication.
- What's the difference between solid wire and flux-cored wire?
- Solid wire (GMAW) is a single-metal electrode that requires external shielding gas to protect the weld pool. It produces cleaner beads with less post-weld cleanup in controlled shop environments. Flux-cored wire (FCAW) is a tubular wire with a mineral flux core that generates a protective slag layer as you weld. Self-shielded FCAW wire requires no external gas — it is the go-to choice for outdoor, field, and structural work where gas coverage would be blown away by wind.
- Can I use MIG wire without shielding gas?
- Solid MIG wire cannot be used without shielding gas — the weld will be porous and structurally weak without gas protection. However, self-shielded flux-cored wire (FCAW-S) is specifically designed for use without external gas. Wire classifications like Lincoln Innershield NR-211-MP (E71T-11) and NR-212 (E71T-GS) run on straight polarity with no gas required. These are commonly called "gasless wire" or "flux-core wire" in the consumer market.
- What wire do I use for welding stainless steel?
- For 304 and 316 series stainless steel, use ER308L (same-alloy joints on 304) or ER316L (same-alloy joints on 316). For welding stainless to mild steel (dissimilar joints), use ER309L. Stainless wire runs on tri-mix (He/Ar/CO₂) or 98% Ar / 2% CO₂ shielding gas. Avoid C25 (75% Ar / 25% CO₂) for stainless — the higher CO₂ content oxidizes the chromium and reduces corrosion resistance in the weld deposit. Harris stainless MIG wires are available in all three classifications at WeldingMart.
- What does the ER70S-6 classification mean?
- Breaking down the AWS designation: E = electrode (carries current); R = can also be used as a filler rod; 70 = minimum tensile strength of 70,000 PSI in the as-welded condition; S = solid wire (as opposed to tubular); 6 = chemistry designation indicating elevated silicon and manganese deoxidizer content for tolerance of rusty or contaminated base metal. The "6" chemistry is more forgiving than ER70S-3 ("3" designation) for shop welding on steel that isn't perfectly clean.
- How do I know when to replace my contact tips?
- Replace contact tips when you notice any of the following: the wire slows or sticks in the tip, the arc becomes erratic or spatter increases suddenly, you see spatter buildup inside the nozzle bore, or the tip bore has visibly elongated from arc erosion. Contact tip life depends heavily on wire type, amperage, and whether you're running short-circuit or spray transfer. Running a premium wire through a worn contact tip negates the wire's quality — stock spare tips from our MIG Contact Tips collection and replace them at the first sign of wear.
- Does wire diameter matter for my welding machine?
- Yes — wire diameter must be compatible with the machine's drive rolls, liner bore, and contact tip bore. Installing 0.035" wire with 0.030" drive rolls will crush the wire and create feeding problems. A 0.023" wire in a 0.035" contact tip will arc inside the tip and cause burnback. Before changing wire diameter, verify that the drive rolls, liner, and contact tips all match the new diameter. Most Lincoln Electric machines ship with one set of rolls installed and include a second set for the alternate common diameter.