Hello,
I've recently been required to do some welding of 1" round .063 wall steel tubes where I am butting the end of one tube against the broadside of another tube. I've cut open some of these joints to see penetration, and one place I seem to have difficulty is the inside corner of the joint, in the acuter angle. When I get the electrode down in there, the arc wants to jump off to either side, rather than down into the root. Do I just need to get a tighter arc and a pointier electrode, or is there some aspect of technique that I'm missing? Is it necessary to get the puddle all the way into the very root, or is a bridged weld similarly strong in that particular spot?
Pardon my ignorance, thanks for your suggestions.
Trevor
Tig welding tips, questions, equipment, applications, instructions, techniques, tig welding machines, troubleshooting tig welding process
Trevor Schwealdson
- Trevor Schwealdson
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Hi Trevor,
Acute angles can be nasty. I try to get down to the root and avoid just bridging. My technique is to move ahead and wash the metal into the root, and then back up a half step and dip. Then move ahead again and wash into the root. Back half step and dip. Lather, rinse, repeat. Well, sometimes it's more of a push of the filler rather than just a dab. There's a lot to fill there compared to the sides of the joint. If you want your bead width consistent all the way around, this will be an area where more filler is needed.
This joint is 60 degrees.
Dave R by Zanconato Custom Cycles, on Flickr
This one is a little easier at 73 degrees.
Eric N by Zanconato Custom Cycles, on Flickr
Acute angles can be nasty. I try to get down to the root and avoid just bridging. My technique is to move ahead and wash the metal into the root, and then back up a half step and dip. Then move ahead again and wash into the root. Back half step and dip. Lather, rinse, repeat. Well, sometimes it's more of a push of the filler rather than just a dab. There's a lot to fill there compared to the sides of the joint. If you want your bead width consistent all the way around, this will be an area where more filler is needed.
This joint is 60 degrees.
Dave R by Zanconato Custom Cycles, on Flickr
This one is a little easier at 73 degrees.
Eric N by Zanconato Custom Cycles, on Flickr
Trevor Schwealdson
- Trevor Schwealdson
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Joined:Fri Jan 24, 2014 11:49 am
Wow, beautiful job. I'll work on applying your technique next time around.
I'd like to eventually get good enough to build bikes, because I'm a leggy 6'8" bike nerd who can never find a frame big enough. My buddy's got a frame fixture too, but he fillet brazes.
My most recent project that I finished was a mobile bike repair workstation, I'll see if I can figure out how to upload a photo here...
[img]IMG_0306.JPG[/img]
I'd like to eventually get good enough to build bikes, because I'm a leggy 6'8" bike nerd who can never find a frame big enough. My buddy's got a frame fixture too, but he fillet brazes.
My most recent project that I finished was a mobile bike repair workstation, I'll see if I can figure out how to upload a photo here...
[img]IMG_0306.JPG[/img]
- Attachments
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- IMG_0306.JPG (56.36 KiB) Viewed 1824 times
Since it's only 0.063" wall, you should be at most using a 1/16" electrode. Lots of missing info here. If for one you are trying to use a 3/32" electrode, unless you have a taper that is 8-10x the electrode diameter, you won't have a "pointed" enough electrode and that causes arc wander because the sides of the electrode are closer to the tubes than the point is to the root. A 1/16" tungsten electrode with a taper at about 3-4x the diameter will help you out tremendously. Again, we don't know how much taper you are currently putting on your tungsten, so we are only left to guess that they probably aren't sharp enough, are too big a diameter, or maybe even both. I personally have used a 0.040" tungsten---they can handle about 80A or so, so they too can be used if they must be.
Trevor Schwealdson
- Trevor Schwealdson
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Yep, I've been using 1/16" electrodes, but sounds like I could do to sharpen them a little pointier, thanks.
Or just get one of these from HTP (thanks Paul). If this can't get into an acute angle, nothing can.Trevor Schwealdson wrote:Yep, I've been using 1/16" electrodes, but sounds like I could do to sharpen them a little pointier, thanks.
- Superiorwelding
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Location:Eddy, TX
I have been drooling over one of these, will have to put it on the list. That would get into the tight joints for sure.
-Jonathan
-Jonathan
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Twitter- @_JonathanLewis
https://www.learntotig.com
https://www.superiorweldandfab.com
https://www.youtube.com/+SuperiorWeldin ... ATHANLEWIS
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