Share
Results 1 to 9 of 9

Thread: Need Very small Torch

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    Southern Middle TN
    Posts
    47

    Default Need Very small Torch

    I have some repairs to do inside the valve pocket on a pair of aluminum cylinder heads. Ive seen some very very small tig torches CK-24 or such. Does Everlast offer a torch this size ? What do you guys recommend ?
    Everlast Powertig 250EX
    Worlds Quickest Oldsmobile Powered Vehicle
    397 cid Twin Turbocharged Oldsmobile

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2013
    Location
    North By God Carolina
    Posts
    43

    Default

    http://www.weldcraft.com/products/wp-series/wp-125/

    I doubt any of them will come cheap.
    No Crack Too Tight, No Gap Too Wide. If You Don't Like The Way I Do It, I'll Let You Try It!

  3. #3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by TD2593 View Post
    I have some repairs to do inside the valve pocket on a pair of aluminum cylinder heads. Ive seen some very very small tig torches CK-24 or such. Does Everlast offer a torch this size ? What do you guys recommend ?
    Yes, you can purchase any CK torch and dinse through Everlast, plug and play for your machine, just call sales.
    2013 250EX : SSC Pedal : I-MIG 250P 20' Profax gun : Power Plasma 60 p80 torch : 3M Speedglas 9100XX : Evolution Rage 3 DB cold saw

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Location
    Disneyland
    Posts
    2,662

    Default

    The problem with WP-24 and more so with the wp-125 micro torch mentioned, is the limited power. Head castings suck the heat, and even with pre-heat it often takes some power to get the job done. Helium mix can help with that, too.

    Are these Batten heads, by any chance?

    With the right hardware you'd be surprised at how much you can get into with a wp-20 and can then have 250 amps on tap, if needed. There are also some tricks like grinding the end of the cup to make the arc turn a corner. Another issue is contamination in the crack, so you often end up milling or grinding away a lot of material, then you can also mill in some better access at the same time. Then weld up from the inside out, building up as you go. Sometimes you can even take the torch apart then feed it through the port and put it together inside the valve pocket. Of course it helps if the heads are big.
    Last edited by Rambozo; 04-23-2013 at 01:52 AM.
    Long arc, short arc, heliarc and in-the-dark!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    Southern Middle TN
    Posts
    47

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Rambozo View Post
    The problem with WP-24 and more so with the wp-125 micro torch mentioned, is the limited power. Head castings suck the heat, and even with pre-heat it often takes some power to get the job done. Helium mix can help with that, too.

    Are these Batten heads, by any chance?

    With the right hardware you'd be surprised at how much you can get into with a wp-20 and can then have 250 amps on tap, if needed. There are also some tricks like grinding the end of the cup to make the arc turn a corner. Another issue is contamination in the crack, so you often end up milling or grinding away a lot of material, then you can also mill in some better access at the same time. Then weld up from the inside out, building up as you go. Sometimes you can even take the torch apart then feed it through the port and put it together inside the valve pocket. Of course it helps if the heads are big.

    Well it is Olds heads but not Battens, but I have had my personal Battens welded between the seats down in the bowls before I got a welder big enough to do it myself. Battens are some pretty nasty castings, fairly soft and somewhat dirty aluminum. The heads are new FCR castings. The bowls are fairly large, ( 2.250 intake valve ) the hole is on the side of the short side radius. It was cut during the CNC process due to some core shift. Ill take a pic of the hole and the area it is and post it up. Im really supprised that you mentioned Battens LOL not many folks know about those unless you are into Oldsmobiles. Thanks for the tips
    Everlast Powertig 250EX
    Worlds Quickest Oldsmobile Powered Vehicle
    397 cid Twin Turbocharged Oldsmobile

  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Location
    Disneyland
    Posts
    2,662

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by TD2593 View Post
    Well it is Olds heads but not Battens, but I have had my personal Battens welded between the seats down in the bowls before I got a welder big enough to do it myself. Battens are some pretty nasty castings, fairly soft and somewhat dirty aluminum. The heads are new FCR castings. The bowls are fairly large, ( 2.250 intake valve ) the hole is on the side of the short side radius. It was cut during the CNC process due to some core shift. Ill take a pic of the hole and the area it is and post it up. Im really supprised that you mentioned Battens LOL not many folks know about those unless you are into Oldsmobiles. Thanks for the tips
    I've welded a lot of Battens and you're right they seem to be cast from what gets swept up off the foundry floor. That's why I guessed you might be welding up a set. I bet some of our old race heads were more weld than original casting. I remember one where the whole corner of the head broke out through a chamber and exhaust port to a couple of head bolt holes. I basically had to rebuild up the entire corner with a few chunks of new material and pounds and pounds of welding rod.

    That is a tough location to weld in. But with the guides pressed out you do have some room, and you can work from both sides, by putting the torch through the intake port. You can make up a flush back cap to get a lil more room, and there is a super short reverse collet body, too. Since it sounds like the area is thin, the low power of a 24 torch will probably be fine, too. That is one advantage of hand porting over CNC, you can hear how thick the walls are by the sound.

    I used to work for Dave Smith back in the day when we had the worlds quickest Olds Pro Stock with the national record and AHRA world title.
    Last edited by Rambozo; 04-23-2013 at 07:47 AM.
    Long arc, short arc, heliarc and in-the-dark!

  7. #7

    Default

    Batten did some Mopar stuff too. An aluminum copy of the W2 head, as well as some W5 production IIRC.

    All crap. Mopar has always had issues with getting decent castings, I don't know why they don't go with Brodix like Koffel did with the B-1's. S/F....Ken M
    Lincoln Power MIG 300
    Everlast 160STH
    Miller 225 Thunderbolt (sold it)
    Lincoln Squarewave 175 TIG(traded it for)
    Miller DEL 200 welder/genset
    Thermal Dynamics 1250XL plasma cutter
    Miller XMT300

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    Southern Middle TN
    Posts
    47

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Rambozo View Post
    I've welded a lot of Battens and you're right they seem to be cast from what gets swept up off the foundry floor. That's why I guessed you might be welding up a set. I bet some of our old race heads were more weld than original casting. I remember one where the whole corner of the head broke out through a chamber and exhaust port to a couple of head bolt holes. I basically had to rebuild up the entire corner with a few chunks of new material and pounds and pounds of welding rod.

    That is a tough location to weld in. But with the guides pressed out you do have some room, and you can work from both sides, by putting the torch through the intake port. You can make up a flush back cap to get a lil more room, and there is a super short reverse collet body, too. Since it sounds like the area is thin, the low power of a 24 torch will probably be fine, too. That is one advantage of hand porting over CNC, you can hear how thick the walls are by the sound.

    I used to work for Dave Smith back in the day when we had the worlds quickest Olds Pro Stock with the national record and AHRA world title.
    Havnt heard the Dave Smith name in many moons !! He did some pretty amazing stuff with the Olds. We are running all small block stuff using the Olds NasCar blocks. I one in the works for a friend out of Sweden, 427" with twin 76mm turbos in a NasCar block going into a 25.1E 68 Cutlass looking for 2100-2200 HP out of this one.
    I think I will get a 24 torch and give it a shot.
    Everlast Powertig 250EX
    Worlds Quickest Oldsmobile Powered Vehicle
    397 cid Twin Turbocharged Oldsmobile

  9. Default

    Ha Ha I thought it was me alone that noticed the different sound (thin metal sound) when porting by hand which means stop and check wall thickness measurements before you blow a hole and have to go and patch up that porting job.

Similar Threads

  1. Small job
    By dzljon in forum On Road Fabrication
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 12-03-2014, 10:59 PM
  2. Small mig
    By bobwills in forum MIG Welding (GMAW/GMAW-P/FCAW)
    Replies: 28
    Last Post: 09-26-2011, 04:46 AM
  3. I need advice choosing a small tig torch for my pp256
    By rodjava in forum Multi-Process Units (TIG,Stick,Plasma/MIG,TIG,Stick Combo units)
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 05-10-2011, 05:38 PM
  4. Small Tig Torch
    By worntorn in forum TIG Welding (GTAW/GTAW-P)
    Replies: 9
    Last Post: 03-28-2011, 10:45 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
  •