Dipping the electrode and resharpening is part of a TIG welder's life.
Dipping the electrode and resharpening is part of a TIG welder's life.
Mark
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Long arc, short arc, heliarc and in-the-dark!
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I have a question all time in my head... Why i can't have a good arc? I cleaned and used the red (recommended) electrode but with the same bad results. Other is why when i want add the rod to the fusion, the tip of the rod jump back. Why i can't thaw the rod correctly?
Your torch angle is too much....the heat is being directed too far forward. Hold the torch more upright. (I think by thaw, you mean "melt"). You may also need a larger rod.
What are you using to clean the aluminum? Also you need to hold the torch abou 1/8" or less off the metal.
Mark
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Last edited by alfweld; 06-18-2014 at 03:57 PM.
That does look horrible.
I think you do have some kind of gas problem. First off 18 LPM is a pretty high for that size cup. Start with half that and for alum, I would use a #7 or #8 cup. Please show some of your steel welds as that will help figure out what you have going on. Also check your torch to make sure there are no air leaks in the argon setup. There is also the chance that you got a bad tank of gas. It has happened more than once to people on this forum.
Also don't use a steel brush. It needs to be stainless steel and only used for aluminum.
Long arc, short arc, heliarc and in-the-dark!
Yes...especially with it being Linde gas Puerto Rico. I would suspect that there's a higher probability that the gas got contaminated someway.
Mark
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The brownish color indicates contamination or shielding gas problems. Same with some of the pitting. I've never seen what happens if you try to TIG with C25 gas, so maybe that's what you have there. Something is definitely not right. TIG is a process where everything needs to be clean, and the finished welds will also be clean. Not like MIG and stick where you can get away with a lot more.
Long arc, short arc, heliarc and in-the-dark!
Looks like no shielding gas. Do you hear gas come from the torch ? Does the tungsten stay shiny silver after a weld ? Post a clear picture of the tungsten after you've welded with it.
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Your right about the color and the weld looks like C25, on my MTS250S I have C25/A75 and 100% Argon tanks on it and forgot to switch them and started to Tig weld and it looked like alfweld welding just a mess then I looked up to see what I set the gas flow too and saw it was the wrong bottle.
Last edited by Kempy; 06-25-2014 at 12:34 AM.
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Alfweld
Looks like a lot of heat and you maybe holding the tungsten to faraway what angle do you have the tungsten at? The start of the weld was bad but it did get better. Can you find a good clean piece of steel to test on the piece you have looks like it might be contaminated with rust it is had to grind it off. Mig welding can stand dirty steel but not Tig. What rod are you using? If you want you can use a clothes hanger it is made of a very good steel if it has plastic coding on it just leave it on it will burn off. Good LUCK.
Everlast PowerTig 325EXT (Canada)
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Miller Dynasty 400 wireless(Canada)
Millermatic 252 plus 30A Spoolgun(Canada)
A coat hanger with a plastic coating? This is unexpected information. Everything I've read says to prep for welding, TIG must be clean clean clean. Everything I've read about coat hangers is that they used to be steel but now they're "steel-ish" and not suitable for welding. Not challenging you, Kempy, because you're way more experienced than I, but a plastic coating on a filler rod that burns off seems like it would introduce a lot of impurities into a TIG weld.
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Actually coat hangers are made out of terrible steel and the plastic coating is detrimental to the weld, even if it burns off because it leave carbon behind.
The grinding you have done to the metal has not ground off the mill scale. It's just polished the mill scale up a little bit. Until you see bright silver, you haven't hit steel yet. That dark coating is mill scale. I can shine if the right grit is applied, but it is still a form of oxidation. Grind it some more.
Mark
performance@everlastwelders.com
www.everlastgenerators.com
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M-F 9am - 5pm EST