Share
Results 1 to 9 of 9

Thread: I did it! I welded nitinol wire!

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1

    Default I did it! I welded nitinol wire!

    I was very proud of my endeavor here. I wasn't sure if I was gonna be able to figure out how to weld this stuff together. As its proprietary, I wont give the trade secret on it. I will however say it has everything to do with controlling heat. Dont bother trying to weld it in mid air. The lowest setting on my 250 just kept melting the wire before I even came close to it with the tungsten. It is only .02" diamter. So I learned how to manage the heat a little bit. I'm sure most of you experienced welders could easily figure it out. Being I am still at my stage in the game I was surprised I got it to weld. Just needs a little grinding on the miniwheel. Its very strong. Ive put it under a lot of stress and havnt broken it. HeAttachment 1469Attachment 1470re is a pic of my nitinol wire loop.
    Frank

    I have a 250 EX welder and several other machines and equipment to allow for small scale manufacturing and prototyping of inventions

    I am located in Oregon about 20 minutes west of Portland

  2. #2

    Default

    Looks good.

    You could likely resistance weld it, potentially using a capacitive discharge machine such as that used for welding thermocouples. This woudl probably give you the least heat afected area.

    I would imagine that the shape memory of the welded area sill no longer be present.
    Everlast 200DX
    Everlast PT185
    Shoptask 3-in-1 (not currently in my garage, but I own it...)

    Any day on a motorcycle like this that ends just needing parts and labor is a good day.
    4.82, 158.67mph 1/8th mile 7.350, 200.35mph 1/4 mile

  3. #3

    Default

    When I had to ball the end of fine, K-type thermocouple wire, and I didn't feel like borrowing the dedicated machine from the instrument lab, I would just twist the ends together, three or four turns, trim them off, then hold them on the welding table with a scrap of steel, start a low amp arc on the table away from the twisted end, and carefully sneak up until the end melted to a nice little ball at the juncture of the two wires. (Sorry for the long sentence!)
    Tony
    Everlast PowerPro 256
    AC225 "Tombstone"
    HF 20 ton press
    Rotary 9000# two-post

  4. #4

    Default

    ok, don't wanna sound too dumb here, but what is nitinol wire? what's it used for? I read something about thermocouple... is this the wire that changes resistance at different temps?

    "I'm not afraid to ask dumb questions... they are easier to handle than dumb mistakes...." I think that was Ghandi or someone....
    I'd like to think I'm the guy they are talkin about when they say, "he could F%^& up a cannon ball in a plowed field."
    .................. /...\
    ..............-...|.....|
    ...*.......-'. \..\__/
    ....\.-'.........\
    ... /......... _/
    ...|......... /"
    ...|.... /_\'
    ....\....\_/
    ......""""

  5. #5

    Default

    My thermocouple making example probably wouldn't work for nitinol. Not real sure, but it just might want to unwind as the heat from the TIG torch approached it's end. The metals used in K-type thermocouples are alumel and chromel .
    Tony
    Everlast PowerPro 256
    AC225 "Tombstone"
    HF 20 ton press
    Rotary 9000# two-post

  6. #6

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ScratchStart View Post
    ok, don't wanna sound too dumb here, but what is nitinol wire? what's it used for? I read something about thermocouple... is this the wire that changes resistance at different temps?

    "I'm not afraid to ask dumb questions... they are easier to handle than dumb mistakes...." I think that was Ghandi or someone....
    Im also curious to what its for... I do know ninitol stands for Nickel Titanium
    ˙˙˙ʎɐqǝ ɯoɹɟ pɹɐoqʎǝʞ dɐǝɥɔ pǝuɯɐp
    PP205 owner
    http://www.sgmedia.net

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    The Boonies of Texas
    Posts
    420

    Default

    Miller Bobcat 3 Phase,
    Miller Suitcase X-Treme 12VS wire feeder for the Bobcat with M-25 300A .045" gun / Bernard 400A 5/64" wire mig gun .
    26 series gas cooled TIG torch, setup for quick connect to Bobcat.
    17 series gas cooled Tig Torch for Low Amp Solar Tig (Direct Solar Panel Powered Tig welding)
    Hobart Handler 187 Mig / Fluxcore
    EVERLAST PowerUltra 205P
    EVERLAST PowerTig 250 EXT 2013 Model

  8. #8

    Default

    wow! good read thank you.

    so is it possible to weld titanium? or was welding nitinol only possible because of the nickel?

    lemme guess, your fixing your kids braces.... on their teeth.... LOL
    I'd like to think I'm the guy they are talkin about when they say, "he could F%^& up a cannon ball in a plowed field."
    .................. /...\
    ..............-...|.....|
    ...*.......-'. \..\__/
    ....\.-'.........\
    ... /......... _/
    ...|......... /"
    ...|.... /_\'
    ....\....\_/
    ......""""

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    The Boonies of Texas
    Posts
    420

    Default

    Absolutely, Titanium can be tig welded. Jody over at weldingtipsandtricks.com has a video of titanium tig welding.

    Thurmond
    Miller Bobcat 3 Phase,
    Miller Suitcase X-Treme 12VS wire feeder for the Bobcat with M-25 300A .045" gun / Bernard 400A 5/64" wire mig gun .
    26 series gas cooled TIG torch, setup for quick connect to Bobcat.
    17 series gas cooled Tig Torch for Low Amp Solar Tig (Direct Solar Panel Powered Tig welding)
    Hobart Handler 187 Mig / Fluxcore
    EVERLAST PowerUltra 205P
    EVERLAST PowerTig 250 EXT 2013 Model

Similar Threads

  1. Welded with a Everlast welder
    By srp in forum Customer Testimonials
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 06-18-2012, 12:40 PM
  2. welded aluminum wire "flying squirrel"
    By jakeru in forum Metal Art
    Replies: 9
    Last Post: 02-23-2012, 03:15 AM
  3. Replies: 26
    Last Post: 02-22-2012, 12:25 PM
  4. Never welded before looking to TIG aluminum in the future
    By Freestyle72 in forum Introduce Yourself
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 04-23-2011, 09:54 PM
  5. Anybody weld nitinol?
    By Nikola Tesla in forum General Welding Questions
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 03-24-2011, 08:46 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •