Tig welding tips, questions, equipment, applications, instructions, techniques, tig welding machines, troubleshooting tig welding process
- big gear head
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Yea, any time you do work for someone else you take a chance of being sued. It's great motivation for doing the best work that you can do. You might want to look into liability insurance.
Freddie
Hollywood1
- Hollywood1
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- subwayrocket
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More practice. Started building a new tank for an old genny . Got a bunch of 12" box bins from my buddys scrap yard, 5052 , gauge says it's 0.128 " 3.3mm . I had to do a lot of this left handed and contorted ...sometimes difficult to see . Welds aren't too pretty and the beads are too big ! I did add extra filler at the ends of the long seams, I figure it'd add strength and wont see it anyway.
I made some ugly welds but I don't think I've got any porosity ...and it holds water .
Gonna try to make nicer looking welds on the outside corners. IT IS TOUGH welding inside something !
I also had some trouble with butterfly distortion soon after starting the long bottom seams.
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I haven't welded the outside seams, outside corners or top yet . This was my test piece for when I weld the outside corners
This was a lot easier than welding inside the thing !
I made some ugly welds but I don't think I've got any porosity ...and it holds water .
Gonna try to make nicer looking welds on the outside corners. IT IS TOUGH welding inside something !
I also had some trouble with butterfly distortion soon after starting the long bottom seams.
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- Tank.jpg (93.14 KiB) Viewed 2159 times
I haven't welded the outside seams, outside corners or top yet . This was my test piece for when I weld the outside corners
This was a lot easier than welding inside the thing !
- OutsideCornerTest.jpg (60.99 KiB) Viewed 2159 times
- MosquitoMoto
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Nice work, Sub.
Admire the way you always have something happening. And agree - welding the inside of a part is tough!
Kym
Admire the way you always have something happening. And agree - welding the inside of a part is tough!
Kym
Hi,
I remember that day, it was a big panic I have to do the job ASAP but life shows something different
It meant to be for some water treatment plant, at first there was not enough of material (shitting), then I found out there is missing parts like sockets and flanges, despite it my boss wants me to do whatever I'm able to do with the materials we have because there is customer coming in two days... and guess what...
nobody came to see it ever and it is steel sitting in the workshop... about 4 mts hehe.
and some pipeing
It's another usually story in my workplace and the life is still going on
I remember that day, it was a big panic I have to do the job ASAP but life shows something different
It meant to be for some water treatment plant, at first there was not enough of material (shitting), then I found out there is missing parts like sockets and flanges, despite it my boss wants me to do whatever I'm able to do with the materials we have because there is customer coming in two days... and guess what...
nobody came to see it ever and it is steel sitting in the workshop... about 4 mts hehe.
- Sludge tank
- IMG_2631.jpg (49.3 KiB) Viewed 2459 times
- Tank
- IMG_2807.jpg (43.91 KiB) Viewed 2459 times
- Tank
- IMG_2808.jpg (41.31 KiB) Viewed 2459 times
- inside
- IMG_2809.jpg (39.7 KiB) Viewed 2459 times
- Pipe
- IMG_2803.jpg (43.86 KiB) Viewed 2459 times
- Pipe
- IMG_2806.jpg (42.49 KiB) Viewed 2459 times
- Pipe
- IMG_2805.jpg (37.9 KiB) Viewed 2459 times
Slawkos
- LtBadd
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Looks good, did you also do the layout work?Slawkos wrote:Hi,
I remember that day, it was a big panic I have to do the job ASAP but life shows something different
It meant to be for some water treatment plant, at first there was not enough of material (shitting), then I found out there is missing parts like sockets and flanges, despite it my boss wants me to do whatever I'm able to do with the materials we have because there is customer coming in two days... and guess what...
nobody came to see it ever and it is steel sitting in the workshop... about 4 mts hehe.
and some piping
IMG_2805.jpgIt's another usually story in my workplace and the life is still going on
Richard
Website
Website
Aaron@6061.com
- Aaron@6061.com
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- subwayrocket
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Aaron@6061.com
- Aaron@6061.com
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Thanks, the gasket surfaces warp about .015"-.030", so they get face-milled flat after welding.subwayrocket wrote:How do you prevent distortion ? How thick are the sheet parts ? Real nice stuff man !
.375" flanges, .125" sheet
- MosquitoMoto
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- big gear head
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Mr.Aaron congratulations very impressive , I don't think welding can be better than this , could you please tell me how you do it a, all of your settings and if you manually grind the tungsten tip or you grind it by hand please . This sample is the best I have ever seen
- MosquitoMoto
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My educated guess is '10 years constant practise + lots of natural talent.'
You don't get that good without working hard for it. Impressive stuff.
Kym
You don't get that good without working hard for it. Impressive stuff.
Kym
As the others have said Aaron that is beautiful work! I would put that on a shelf as a decoration. But I'm sure it looks awesome under the hood as well!
Brian
Miller Thunderbolt 225 AC/DC
Everlast 255EXT with W300 cooler
Hobo Freight 170 MIG Welder
Miller Thunderbolt 225 AC/DC
Everlast 255EXT with W300 cooler
Hobo Freight 170 MIG Welder
Nice work indeed....hope to finally make one of those later this summer after I finish my sheet metal intake for my 4.6 with a 100mm Accufab. I've done a lot of testing with TBs over the years Accufab is right at the top, the Wilson Manifolds pieces did well also.
Beautiful work I'm assuming those are done with an newer Dynasty setup
Beautiful work I'm assuming those are done with an newer Dynasty setup
I weld stainless, stainless and more stainless...Food Industry, sanitary process piping, vessels, whatever is needed, I like to make stuff.
ASME IX, AWS 17.1, D1.1
Instagram #RNHFAB
ASME IX, AWS 17.1, D1.1
Instagram #RNHFAB
Aaron@6061.com
- Aaron@6061.com
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No, the only time I ever use the pulser is on stainless tubing (exhaust headers) when no filler rod is used.big gear head wrote:Yes Aaron, that is beautiful. Are you using a pulse setting for that?
Aaron@6061.com
- Aaron@6061.com
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I chuck my tungsten in a handheld drill and spin it as slow as possible while grinding it to shape on a bench grinder with a 6" wheel.ESENTI wrote:Mr.Aaron congratulations very impressive , I don't think welding can be better than this , could you please tell me how you do it a, all of your settings and if you manually grind the tungsten tip or you grind it by hand please . This sample is the best I have ever seen
Weld settings:
60-350 hertz. Doesn't really matter... I get tired of the same sound so I change it around. Just make sure your puddle isn't shaking around a lot. One time I had it at 145 hz and it did not like that for some reason... The puddle was shaking all over the place. I changed it a few HZ and it stabilized.
200A EN
150A EP
80% balance
15CFH gas flow (for indoor welding with zero air movement)
Other than maximum amps (and hertz for the reason mentioned above), I honestly never change from these settings. I think people over-complicate all the settings. I use these setting for all aluminum projects. Thin, thick, dirty cast, clean, etc...
If I'm welding thin stuff that only requires 20 amps, I'll set the max amps to 20, but all the percentages and ratios remain the same:
1/8" aluminum projects, 120 amps:
If I am welding really thick stuff, I set the max amps to 350 and keep all the percentages the same and bump the gas flow up to about 18 CFH if I'm having any issues with weld appearance:
Last edited by Aaron@6061.com on Sat Jan 30, 2016 11:09 am, edited 2 times in total.
Aaron@6061.com
- Aaron@6061.com
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Thanks. Yeah, I use a Dynasty 350. I can make them look just as good with my old Syncrowave 180 other than the white etched area on the sides of the weld is much wider. I think a lot of people get discouraged and think they would be a much better welder if only they had more expensive equipment, but I don't that is true for the most part.Rick_H wrote:Nice work indeed....hope to finally make one of those later this summer after I finish my sheet metal intake for my 4.6 with a 100mm Accufab. I've done a lot of testing with TBs over the years Accufab is right at the top, the Wilson Manifolds pieces did well also.
Beautiful work I'm assuming those are done with an newer Dynasty setup
Accufab makes the highest quality throttle bodies in my opinion... I have seen all brands and that's why I am a dealer for only Accufab. Oh, and I think you must mean some other size than 100mm. To the best of my knowledge, they don't offer a 100mm. I sell a ton of 90mm and 105mm ones in the old 5.0 Mustang bolt pattern. Hit me up when you are ready to purchase one if you haven't already.
Aaron@6061.com
- Aaron@6061.com
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Yeah, everything you see on the website is my fabrication work. I cut and fit all the parts myself. But about 2 years ago, I had a friend start machining all the 3/8" thick flanges. He has a much more accurate mill that leaves a cleaner cut (and he's a much better machinist than me).motox wrote:Aaron
do you fab all these beauties as well?
craig
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