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Lincoln ED031861 Lincore 60-G Metal-Cored GMAW-C Welding Wire 1/16 in, 300 lb Accu-Trak Drum
$4,341.60$5,319.00Unit price /UnavailableLincoln ED035893 Lincolnweld MIL800-HPNi Submerged Arc SAW Flux, 50 lb Bag
$340.48$358.00Unit price /UnavailableLincoln ED035080 Blue Max 309LSi MIG GMAW Stainless Steel Welding Wire
$600.34$664.62Unit price /UnavailableLincoln WX Multi-Oxide Premium Tungsten Electrode, 3/32 in x 7 in KP4723-332
$42.55$53.00Unit price /UnavailableLincoln WX Multi-Oxide Premium Tungsten Electrode, 1/8” x 7” KP4723-18
$74.18$94.20Unit price /UnavailableLincoln ED036060 Lincoln ER308/308L TIG GTAW Welding Rod, 5/32 in, 10 lb Easy Open Can
$151.60$158.20Unit price /UnavailableHarris 4043 Aluminum MIG Welding Wire (ER4043)
From $19.61$24.66Unit price /UnavailableCK Worldwide - Tungsten 1/16″ x 7″ 2% Lanthanated (Pack of 3) - T1167GL2-3
$22.55Unit price /UnavailableCK Worldwide - Tungsten .020″ x 7″ 2% Ceriated (Pack of 10) - T0207GC2
$18.99Unit price /UnavailableHarris 308 Stainless Steel TIG GTAW Welding Rod 5/32 36in. 10LB Box - 0308T70
$121.15$168.40Unit price /UnavailableHarris 309L Stainless TIG GTAW Welding Rod 1/8 X 36 X 10# PKG - 309LT60
$146.02$177.80Unit price /UnavailableHarris 347 Stainless 1/8 TIG GTAW Welding Rod 36in. 10LB - 0347T60
$155.15$215.60Unit price /UnavailableHarris Stay-Silv 5 Phos-Copper Brazing Alloy - 3/32 in (2.4 mm) - 1 ea Tube - 5520R1
$176.90Unit price /UnavailableMK Products Tungsten 3/32 Diameter 0.938 Inch Length - 635-093-0.938
$137.13Unit price /UnavailableLincoln ED031931 Pipeliner G90M Flux-Cored FCAW-G Welding, 0.047 in, 33 lb Plastic Spool
$270.47$331.98Unit price /UnavailableWelding Wire — Shop MIG, Flux Core, Stick & TIG Welding Wire | WeldingMart
When you need welding wire, WeldingMart stocks the full spectrum — from mig wire (solid ER70S-6 for clean GMAW) to flux core wire (self-shielded FCAW-S for outdoor and structural work), stick electrodes, TIG rod, and brazing alloys. Whether you’re running a production MIG line on mild steel, welding stainless pipe with TIG rod, or using self-shielded flux core welding wire on a windy job site, every consumable in this collection ships same-day before 3 PM CT with free freight on orders $99 and up. WeldingMart is a factory-authorized Lincoln Electric dealer and an authorized Hobart and Harris Products distributor — every spool of Lincoln SuperArc, Innershield, and Outershield wire ships factory sealed with full manufacturer warranty registered in your name. With 150+ wire and filler metal products across MIG wire (~35), stick electrodes (~60), TIG rod (~15), and brazing rod (~20), this is your single source for welding consumables at every diameter, alloy, and spool size from 2 lb through 44 lb spools and 500 lb drums. Browse by wire type, application, or top Lincoln product below.
What Is Welding Wire?
Welding wire is a broad term for any consumable filler metal fed into a weld joint to join base metals. The four common forms are: solid wire spooled for continuous-feed processes (GMAW/MIG), flux-cored wire spooled for flux-cored arc welding (FCAW), straight-cut rod for TIG welding (GTAW), and coated stick electrodes for shielded metal arc welding (SMAW). Choosing the right wire type and diameter is the single most important consumable decision in any welding setup.
Solid MIG Wire vs. Flux-Cored Wire (FCAW)
Solid MIG wire (GMAW process) is a bare metal spool that requires an external shielding gas — typically 75% Argon / 25% CO₂ (C25) for mild steel or 100% Argon for aluminum. It produces clean, low-spatter welds with excellent bead appearance, making it the preferred choice for indoor shop work, auto body, and production fabrication. Flux-cored wire (FCAW) contains flux inside a hollow core that burns to create shielding, eliminating the need for a gas cylinder. Self-shielded FCAW-S — like Lincoln Innershield NR-211-MP — runs outdoors in wind without disruption. Gas-shielded FCAW-G adds external gas alongside the flux for higher deposition rates and better impact toughness on structural steel.
AWS Classification System
The AWS classification stamped on every spool tells you exactly what you’re buying: ER70S-6 = electrode/rod, 70,000 psi tensile, solid wire, 6th deoxidizer level (high silicon for dirty steel); E71T-11 = electrode, 70,000 psi, all-position, tubular (flux-cored), self-shielded; ER308L = stainless filler, low-carbon 308 alloy. Match the AWS class to your base metal and process spec before ordering.
Wire Diameter Selection
Diameter determines heat input and deposition rate. For thin sheet metal (22–18 ga) and auto body, use .023”. For general fabrication on 16 ga to 3/16” steel, .030” is the most versatile choice. Most production shops run .035” as their all-purpose diameter on 1/8”–1/4” material. For structural and heavy plate (3/8”+), step up to .045” or larger for high deposition rates. Spool sizes run from 2 lb (spool gun / small machine), 10 lb (standard shop use), 33 lb (production), and 44 lb fiber spools for sustained high-deposition operations.
Choose by Wire Type
- MIG Wire (Solid GMAW) — ER70S-6 for mild steel, ER308L/309L/316L for stainless, ER4043/ER5356 for aluminum. The clean-running, low-spatter choice for indoor shop and production GMAW. Available .023”–.045” on 2–44 lb spools from Lincoln SuperArc and Hobart HB-28.
- Flux-Cored Wire (FCAW) — E71T-11 / E71T-GS self-shielded for outdoor and field work; E71T-1 gas-shielded for structural and production. Lincoln Innershield NR-211-MP (FCAW-S) and Outershield 71M/71 Elite (FCAW-G) are the category flagships.
- Stick Electrodes (SMAW) — E7018 for structural low-hydrogen code work; E6010/E6011 for pipe root passes and dirty or rusty steel; E6013 for sheet metal and training; E308L/E309L/E316L stainless rods. Lincoln Excalibur 7018 MR and Fleetweld 5P+ lead this category.
- TIG Rod (GTAW) — ER70S-2 for mild steel root passes; ER308L for 304 stainless; ER309L for dissimilar joints; ER316L for marine/chemical; ER4043 for cast aluminum and 6061; ER5356 for 5xxx alloys. Harris and Lincoln cut-length 36” rods in 1/16”–3/32”.
Choose by Application
- Mild Steel — ER70S-6 solid MIG wire (SuperArc L-56) or E71T-11 flux-cored (Innershield NR-211-MP) covers 95% of carbon steel work. For high-deposition structural, use Outershield 71M FCAW-G.
- Stainless Steel — Match wire alloy to base metal: ER308L for 304/304L; ER309L for stainless-to-carbon dissimilar joints; ER316L for marine and chemical environments. Use tri-mix shielding gas (Ar/He/CO₂) for MIG on stainless.
- Aluminum — ER4043 for cast aluminum, 6061, and 6063 (fluid puddle, crack-resistant); ER5356 for 5xxx wrought alloys and high-strength joints. Always use 100% Argon shielding gas and a spool gun or push-pull system to prevent birdnesting.
- Hardfacing — Chromium-carbide and complex carbide hardfacing wires for wear-resistant overlays on bucket teeth, crusher jaws, and agricultural tillage equipment. Lincoln Electric Lincore series.
- Specialty Alloys — Nickel alloys (Techalloy 625, Techalloy 82), copper alloys (ER CuSi-A silicon bronze), and low-alloy high-strength wires (SuperArc LA-90, LA-100 for 80–100 ksi applications on structural and pressure vessel work).
Top Lincoln Wire Products
- Lincoln SuperArc L-56 (ER70S-6) — Family Hub — The #1 selling mild steel MIG wire in North America. High manganese and silicon deoxidizers handle mill scale and light surface contamination. Available .023”–.045” in 2, 10, 12.5, 33, and 44 lb spools. Factory authorized Lincoln pricing.
- Lincoln SuperArc L-56 .035” 12.5 lb Spool (ED028676) — The bestselling individual L-56 SKU. ER70S-6, .035” diameter, 12.5 lb spool fits standard 8” spool hub. The go-to diameter for general fabrication on 1/8”–3/16” mild steel.
- Lincoln Innershield NR-211-MP .035” 10 lb (ED016354) — Self-shielded flux-cored E71T-11, no gas required. All-position welding up to 1/2” mild steel. The field welder’s standard for outdoor structural and maintenance work.
- Lincoln Outershield 71M (FCAW-G) — Family Hub — Gas-shielded flux-cored E71T-1C/1M-H8. Higher deposition, lower hydrogen, better impact toughness than self-shielded for structural steel, shipbuilding, and pressure vessels. Requires 75/25 Ar/CO₂ or 100% CO₂.
- Lincoln Outershield 71M .035” 10 lb (ED026804) — Entry spool size for shops trialing FCAW-G or running mixed-process cells. E71T-1C/1M-H8 certified for structural and pressure vessel applications.
- Lincoln SuperArc LA-90 .045” 44 lb (EDS30776) — Low-alloy ER80S-Ni1 wire for weathering (Cor-Ten) steels, high-strength structural applications, and low-temperature impact requirements. 80,000 psi minimum tensile deposit.
Pair Your Wire With a Welder
Wire is only half the equation. WeldingMart stocks the MIG welders, stick machines, and TIG welders that run these consumables:
- MIG & Flux-Core Welders (GMAW/FCAW) — Lincoln Power MIG 180 Dual, 215 MPi, 256, and 360MP. Feed solid ER70S-6 or flux-cored wire on one machine. Free freight on all MIG welders $99+.
- Stick Welding Electrodes & Machines (SMAW) — Lincoln Excalibur 7018 MR, Fleetweld 5P+ E6010, and the full SMAW electrode lineup for pipeline, structural, and maintenance work.
- TIG Welders (GTAW) — Lincoln Square Wave TIG 200, Precision TIG 225, and 375 Pro for DC and AC/DC TIG on steel, stainless, and aluminum. Pair with matching ER-class cut rods.
Welding Wire FAQ
What is the difference between MIG and flux core wire?
MIG wire (solid GMAW wire) is a bare metal electrode that requires an external shielding gas — typically 75/25 Argon-CO₂ for mild steel. It produces cleaner, lower-spatter welds best suited for indoor fabrication. Flux-core wire (FCAW) has a hollow core filled with flux that generates its own shielding protection as it burns. Self-shielded flux-core (E71T-11 like Lincoln NR-211-MP) needs no gas cylinder, making it the standard choice for outdoor welding, windy job sites, and field repair. Gas-shielded flux-core (E71T-1 like Outershield 71M) combines flux with external shielding gas for higher deposition rates and better mechanical properties on heavy structural steel. Same MIG machine runs both — you only need to swap polarity and drive rolls.
What does ER70S-6 mean?
ER = Electrode/Rod (solid wire usable in both MIG and TIG). 70 = minimum tensile strength of 70,000 psi in the deposited weld metal. S = solid wire (as opposed to tubular/flux-cored). 6 = the sixth chemical composition requirement in the AWS A5.18 classification, specifying high levels of silicon and manganese deoxidizers. The “6” makes ER70S-6 the best choice for welding on steel with mill scale or light surface rust — the reason Lincoln SuperArc L-56 (ER70S-6) is the world’s most widely used MIG wire.
What wire diameter for thin metal?
For sheet metal and auto body panels (22–18 gauge), use .023” ER70S-6 with short-circuit transfer and 75/25 Ar-CO₂. The small diameter minimizes heat input and reduces burn-through risk. For 16–11 gauge general fabrication, step to .030”. For 1/8”–3/16” “everyday” shop metal, .035” is the industry standard. Reserve .045” for 1/4” and heavier plate where deposition rate matters more than burn-through prevention.
Do I need shielding gas for flux core?
It depends on the wire classification. Self-shielded flux-core (FCAW-S) — classified E71T-11 or E71T-GS — generates all shielding from the flux inside the wire and needs no external gas cylinder. This is why it’s the go-to choice for outdoor, windy, or field welding. Gas-shielded flux-core (FCAW-G) — classified E71T-1 (like Lincoln Outershield 71M) — requires a shielding gas (typically 75/25 Ar-CO₂ or 100% CO₂) just like solid MIG wire. The trade-off: FCAW-G gives higher deposition rates and better impact toughness than FCAW-S, making it the structural code welding standard.
What is the shelf life of welding wire?
Unopened solid MIG wire (ER70S-6) stored in a dry, climate-controlled environment has an indefinite shelf life — the factory anti-rust copper coating protects it for years. Once opened, re-seal the bag and store in low-humidity conditions; surface oxidation can develop in high-humidity environments within months and will degrade arc stability. Low-hydrogen stick electrodes (E7018) are moisture-sensitive and should be stored in an oven at 250–300°F after opening and used within a few hours per AWS D1.1 structural code. Flux-cored wire is less moisture-sensitive than low-hydrogen SMAW electrodes but should still be stored sealed between uses.
How much wire do I need per pound of weld?
Deposition efficiency for solid MIG wire is approximately 95–98% — nearly all the wire you feed becomes deposited weld metal, with minimal spatter loss. A rough rule: 1 lb of ER70S-6 wire deposits approximately 0.96 lb of weld metal. Flux-cored wire has lower deposition efficiency (82–86% for FCAW-S, 88–93% for FCAW-G) because some mass is consumed as slag and fume. For project planning, use the wire manufacturer’s deposition rate charts — Lincoln Electric publishes these for all SuperArc and Innershield products.
Can I use MIG wire for stick welding?
No. MIG wire (solid ER-class wire) is designed for continuous-feed wire-feed processes (GMAW and GTAW). It is not coated with the flux covering that stick electrodes (SMAW) require to generate shielding and slag. Running bare MIG wire in a stick welder would produce an unshielded arc with severe porosity and no arc stability. For stick welding, you need properly classified E-series coated electrodes (E6010, E6011, E7018, etc.) matched to your stick welder output and base metal.
WeldingMart is your factory-authorized source for Lincoln Electric, Hobart, and Harris welding wire. Same-day shipping before 3 PM CT, free freight on orders $99+, full factory warranty on every product. Browse the full wire collection above, compare classifications and spool sizes, and add your wire to the cart — our team in Appleton, WI is standing by to help you match wire to process, base metal, and diameter for your specific application.
Stock your shop completely: source Lincoln Electric Welders & Supplies and Harris Products Group consumables alongside your wire orders. Browse the full All Welding Machines & Supplies catalog for machines to pair with these consumables.
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