Why does my MIG wire keep sticking in the contact tip? (Fast Burnback Fix)

If your MIG wire keeps welding itself to the contact tip and stopping the weld cold, you’re dealing with burnback—the arc climbs up the wire and fuses it inside the tip. The good news: you can usually fix it in minutes by addressing feed consistency first, then consumables.

This guide is a fast, symptom-first troubleshooting path that avoids random setting changes and gets you back to a stable arc.


Where to Buy (Quick Fix Parts)

The most likely failed components when wire sticks in the tip are:

  • Contact tip (worn, spattered, wrong size, overheated)
  • Gun liner (dirty, kinked, wrong size, or packed with dust/rust)
  • Nozzle/diffuser area (spatter buildup causing heat and drag)

Top Pick (Primary Fix)

Unknown (Verify ASIN).
Reason: contact tips are the #1 “swap first” consumable for burnback, but the correct tip depends on gun style (Tweco/Lincoln/Miller) and wire diameter.

Backup / Consumable Option

Unknown (Verify ASIN).
Reason: liners are the next most common fix when feeding is inconsistent, but liner fit depends on gun model + length + wire type.


Key Takeaways

  • If wire sticks in the tip, assume wire feed slowed down before you assume settings are wrong.
  • Swap the contact tip first (fastest, cheapest diagnostic).
  • Then check for liner drag and drive-roll issues (tension, size, debris).
  • Don’t chase voltage/WFS until the wire feeds smoothly with the gun straight.

Symptoms (Fast Diagnosis)

  • Wire fuses to the contact tip during a start or mid-bead
  • Arc gets harsh, then the gun “stutters,” then stops feeding
  • You hear the drive rolls slip or chatter
  • Tip is discolored/blue, wire is balled up at the end
  • Wire feeds fine with the gun straight, but sticks when the lead is bent

Root Causes (Mapped to Symptoms)

  • Wire sticks on starts → wire speed too low at start, stickout too short, tip partially blocked
  • Random sticking mid-bead → inconsistent feeding (liner drag, roll tension wrong, spool drag too high)
  • Drive rolls slip + sticking → roll tension too loose, wrong roll groove, worn rolls, dirty wire
  • Only happens when lead is bent → liner kinked/worn, lead routed too tight, liner too short/long
  • Tip burns up fast → wrong tip size, poor electrical contact at tip/diffuser, excessive heat from short stickout

Quick Fix (Do This First)

Do these in order. This avoids over-adjusting your machine.

  • Stop and cut the wire clean (don’t yank it out under tension).
  • Replace the contact tip (fastest way to eliminate a partially blocked/worn tip).
  • Straighten the gun lead and test-feed wire. If it feeds better straight than bent, suspect the liner/lead routing.
  • Back off drive-roll tension, then re-tighten just enough to feed without slipping (don’t crush the wire).
  • Check spool drag: the spool should not freewheel, but it also shouldn’t feel “braked.”

Step-by-Step Fix

  1. Power down and remove the nozzle and contact tip.
  2. Inspect the tip bore: if it’s ovaled, packed with spatter, or the wire shows scoring, replace it.
  3. Check stickout (typical short-circuit MIG is often around 3/8 in. / 10 mm; exact value depends on process and parameters). If you’re extremely short, you can overheat the tip fast.
  4. Verify wire size matches tip size (Unknown—verify what’s installed). A mismatch can cause drag or arcing at the tip.
  5. Open the feeder:
    • Confirm correct drive-roll groove (solid vs flux-core knurled; correct diameter).
    • Set tension so the wire feeds reliably but does not deform.
  6. Check the liner:
    • Blow out debris (dry air only; avoid introducing oil).
    • If the liner is kinked, rusty, or packed with dust, replace it.
  7. Reassemble and run a short test bead.
  8. Only after feed is stable: fine-tune wire speed and voltage one change at a time.

Parts That Actually Fix This

Contact Tip

Replace when:

  • Wire sticks repeatedly
  • Tip bore is worn/oval
  • Spatter is baked inside the tip Adjust instead when:
  • Tip is clean/new and the problem tracks with feed speed or stickout

Liner

Replace when:

  • Feeding changes dramatically when the lead is bent vs straight
  • Wire feels “gritty” when you hand-feed
  • You see rust/dirt coming out when you remove the tip

Drive Rolls

Replace/repair when:

  • Rolls are worn smooth
  • Wrong groove type/size is installed Adjust instead when:
  • Tension is simply too tight/too loose

Diffuser / Nozzle (if relevant)

Replace when:

  • Threads are damaged or the tip doesn’t seat tightly
  • Spatter buildup is severe and recurring

Replace vs Adjust (Fast Decision Table)

ProblemAdjust FirstReplace
Wire sticks only on startsIncrease wire feed slightly, confirm stickoutContact tip
Wire sticks randomly mid-beadCheck drive-roll tension + spool dragLiner (if feed changes with lead bend)
Drive rolls slip/chatterIncrease tension slightly, verify grooveDrive rolls (if worn/wrong type)
Tip overheats/discolors fastIncrease stickout slightly, confirm duty cycle habitsTip + check diffuser seating

Copy table

Rule: If not fixed in 2–3 minutes → replace the consumable.


Prevention Tips

  • Keep wire clean and dry (rusty wire increases liner drag fast).
  • Store spools sealed when possible; wipe dust off before loading.
  • Route the gun lead with wide bends, not tight loops.
  • Replace tips on a routine interval based on usage (Unknown—verify for your duty cycle and wire type).
  • Periodically blow out or replace liners—especially if you run dirty environments (fabrication dust, grinding debris).

Safety Notes

  • Wear an ANSI Z87.1 rated welding helmet and safety glasses under the hood.
  • Use proper welding gloves and keep hands clear of pinch points in the feeder.
  • Maintain ventilation appropriate for the material and process (especially galvanized, stainless, and flux-core fumes).

FAQ

Why does burnback happen even when my settings “used to work”?

Consumables drift. A slightly worn tip, dirty liner, or tight spool brake can slow feed just enough that the arc climbs into the tip.

Can a bad ground cause wire sticking in the tip?

It can contribute to unstable arc behavior, but most “wire welded to tip” events still trace back to feed inconsistency or a blocked/worn tip.

Should I crank drive-roll tension to stop slipping?

No. Too much tension can deform the wire, increase liner drag, and make feeding worse. Set tension to the minimum that feeds reliably.

Why is it worse when the gun cable is bent?

That’s a classic liner/lead-routing indicator: bending increases friction, which slows wire feed and triggers burnback.


Internal Links (Related WSP Guides)

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