I have been tigging steel for a while now, and when I bought my current machine, I bought AC so I could one day start to do ally. Well I decided to give it a go, and I think I am on the right track but there is one thing I cant quite work out.
I am using a 1.6mm white tip tungsten, with a CK gas saver gas lens, and a CK flex loc torch (which I love). The machine is a UK built R-Tech, which has been amazing so far (atleast, I think it has been. Who knows how a more experienced welder would like it).
I have a bit of 3mm ally, which was clean and then i scrubbed the surface with a stainless angle grinder brush (new). The filler is 2.4mm. I can't remember my settings exactly, but I set the current to about 80 amps and floored it on the pedal (I decided I was not quite ready to do current control on the fly until I could run a decent bead with a constant current) I had my balance set about midway, and frequency in the middle.
My question is, how do I make a smaller diameter puddle? I seem to be making very wide puddles, about 8-9mm wide. I am holding the tip quite close to the material, but still it melts a large area. Am I using too much current? I know the frequency can effect the arc cone but in my experimentation, I did not see a vast change. I did try winding the current down but I find that it either does not puddle at all, or I get a very wide puddle. Is there perhaps a sweet spot were 1-2 amps can mean the difference between no puddle and a massive one?
I feel like for me to decide im ready to actually try and join two bits of metal together, I need to be able to run a bead about 1/4" wide down the plate, and so far, im not really able to do that. Is my filler too thick?
The picture below shows the narrowest bead I was able to make, at about 7mm wide. Also below, just for fun, is a photo I took of my practice plate with a thermal imaging camera. Kinda cool.


Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Pete.