Howdy Folks! I was looking for some advice on an upcoming project. I will be restoring a 1940's vintage Harley-Davidson springer front fork that has been extended using Ford Model A radius rods. This was common practice during the first "long chopper" craze of the late 1960's-early 1970's. Problem is that back in those days, people from every walk of life was doing this, so buying a vintage piece like I did was a crapshoot, as far as whether or not you were going to end up with the forks snapping at the weld point at 70MPH on the Interstate. The piece that I bought is extended about 10" over stock, using the aformentioned radius rods for the rear fork, and some unknown tubing (by the looks, some cheap, welded-seam hotroll) for the front fork. I'll be replacing the front tubes with seamless DOM 4130 in an upcoming thread. Today, I was looking for advice on filler rod for this project. I'll be using my 250EX, which is the GREATEST welder ever made, IMHO (and until I get the new 255EXT that is!). Anyway, I came across the link below. A good, SHORT read.
http://www.aws.org/wj/apr03/AWfeature.html
It explains filler selection, and the possible tensile strength, depending on dilution level achieved with the parent metal. I was educated and surprised at how strong a joint can be made with the right conditions. I recommend that anyone interested in welding tubing give it a look. Take ya' 5 minutes. Good Luck!!