


Melting Pole welding is a common consumable-electrode arc welding process, in which a continuously fed metal wire acts as both the electrode and filler material. During welding, the wire melts under the arc heat to form a stable weld pool, while gas or flux provides necessary shielding to prevent oxidation and contamination.

This method features stable arc, high deposition efficiency, low spatter, and excellent weld formation. It is widely applied in MIG/MAG, flux-cored wire welding, and submerged arc welding, suitable for carbon steel, stainless steel, alloy steel, aluminum and other metal materials. It has become one of the most efficient and reliable joining technologies in modern manufacturing, construction, and automated production lines.