Matching MIG wire diameter to the metal and your welder is the difference between a clean bead and either burn-through or a cold, piled-up weld. This selector recommends a wire size from the base metal, its thickness, and your machine’s maximum amperage, and explains the amperage range and gas that go with it.
How it works
Each wire diameter melts cleanly only within a usable amperage band, and the amperage you need scales with material thickness. The tool matches them:
1. estimate the amperage needed for the thickness (~1 amp per 0.001 in for steel)
2. pick the smallest wire whose usable range covers that amperage
3. require the welder max amperage to reach that range
Thin sheet needs small wire so it melts at low current without blowing through; heavy plate needs large wire to deposit metal quickly at high current. Aluminum is sized up slightly because it feeds and conducts heat differently from steel.
Example and tips
For 16-gauge (about 0.060 inch) mild steel, the job wants roughly 60-90 amps, which points to .030 wire on a typical 140-amp machine. For 3/8-inch plate the tool calls for .035 or .045 to reach the 200-amp-plus range, assuming your welder can supply it. Always set wire feed speed and voltage from the wire maker’s chart for the chosen diameter, use the matching shielding gas, and run a test bead on scrap before welding the real joint.