Last Night I had turned my Boombox and Dynasty on to warm up, didn't want to turn on my Coolmate cause I didn't want to have to listen to it run while I prepped the aluminum part to weld. Put my gloves and hood on and proceeded to weld about a 8" bead on aprx. 3/16" thick part, I did notice that my tungsten looked overheated after the weld and the torch a CK 230 Flex felt warmer than usual, then I noticed that it was to quiet in my shop, forgot to turn on my darn cooler!! Should I be checking anything out on it?? I turned the cooler on after words and did a couple of test beads and everything seems to still work fine??
Thanks in advance
Pete
Pete
Esab SVI 300, Mig 4HD wire feeder, 30A spool gun, Miller Passport, Dynasty 300 DX, Coolmate 4, Spectrum 2050, C&K Cold Wire feeder WF-3, Black Gold Tungsten Sharperner, Prime Weld 225
Doubtful you hurt anything, other than cooking your tungsten a bit. Remove it and polish it up with ScotchBrite. You essentially ran "air-cooled" versus water-cooled. No big deal.
my newest dumb this is to let the cable from the foot peddle under the edge
of the pedal so when i try to tack i get half pedal, thus no tack.
this has happened a few times doing aluminum also. everyone knows
how that turns out....
craig
htp invertig 221
syncrowave 250
miller 140 mig
hypertherm plasma
morse 14 metal devil
Based on the first sentences I thought it was gonna be that your tig welder messed with your speaker. I was running some aluminum off of a diversion 180 the other day and my teacher yells at me and says look what you did. About half way through the CNC program he was running it just shut off and seized up due to me welding. I guess AC tig will do stuff like that. Or when I am in the booth next to someone welding on aluminum my helemet won't shut off in X-mode since that crap goes through every nook and cranny
A student now but really want to weld everyday. Want to learn everything about everything. Want to become a knower of all and master of none.
Instagram: @farmwelding
Nick
All I know is that I wouldn't want to to anything to ruin a water cooled torch. I learned on a 17 and then went to a water cooled for a few months at a local tech school (not a ton of hours but enough). I came back now and burn my hand everyday running from 120-180 amps almost non-stop. I have to stop after a half an hour so I don't burn my hands all the time.
A student now but really want to weld everyday. Want to learn everything about everything. Want to become a knower of all and master of none.
Instagram: @farmwelding
Nick
Farmwelding wrote:All I know is that I wouldn't want to to anything to ruin a water cooled torch. I learned on a 17 and then went to a water cooled for a few months at a local tech school (not a ton of hours but enough). I came back now and burn my hand everyday running from 120-180 amps almost non-stop. I have to stop after a half an hour so I don't burn my hands all the time.
Yah, I hear ya! When I bought my first Tig welder I bought a air cooled torch to save on $ and they do get hot!!
Pete
Esab SVI 300, Mig 4HD wire feeder, 30A spool gun, Miller Passport, Dynasty 300 DX, Coolmate 4, Spectrum 2050, C&K Cold Wire feeder WF-3, Black Gold Tungsten Sharperner, Prime Weld 225
motox wrote:my newest dumb this is to let the cable from the foot peddle under the edge
of the pedal so when i try to tack i get half pedal, thus no tack.
this has happened a few times doing aluminum also. everyone knows
how that turns out....
craig
Craig, 1 word buddy WIRELESS...lol I love my wireless pedal as I find myself trapping the damn cord at times on the wired pedal we have on the main shop welders as I move it around the table. Getting it under a stool leg is popular for me too...lol
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
motox wrote:my newest dumb this is to let the cable from the foot peddle under the edge
of the pedal so when i try to tack i get half pedal, thus no tack.
this has happened a few times doing aluminum also. everyone knows
how that turns out....
craig
Craig, 1 word buddy WIRELESS...lol I love my wireless pedal as I find myself trapping the damn cord at times on the wired pedal we have on the main shop welders as I move it around the table. Getting it under a stool leg is popular for me too...lol
Unless your machine has no way to change foot pedals with that style connection and only accepts Ethernet cable ends and doesn't allow you to easily replace torches or stick weld (Miller diversion 180 he says while coughing)
A student now but really want to weld everyday. Want to learn everything about everything. Want to become a knower of all and master of none.
Instagram: @farmwelding
Nick
pgk wrote:Looks like that got hot in a hurry Otto! Luckily my machine was set for about half of that!
Pete
Pete, I should have mentioned it was AC welding, so tons of heat in the torch, lead, and coolant already. The steam looked like smoke (and there was smoke from the burned hose), and someone ran up and killed the disconnect at my power outlet PDQ. I was doing a long 1/2" aluminum 4G from a creeper, and rolled a wheel over the supply line, and "poof", all gone.
I was doing 1/4 or 3/16" 3003 diamond plate once, blasting my welder for hooooooours. Had to keep on stopping because the torch got too hot. Ended up grabbing a bucket of cold water and I would dip the torch it in, worked just about once
Olivero wrote:I was doing 1/4 or 3/16" 3003 diamond plate once, blasting my welder for hooooooours. Had to keep on stopping because the torch got too hot. Ended up grabbing a bucket of cold water and I would dip the torch it in, worked just about once
Must be kind of hard on those alumina cups, I'd think...
pgk wrote:Looks like that got hot in a hurry Otto! Luckily my machine was set for about half of that!
Pete
Pete, I should have mentioned it was AC welding, so tons of heat in the torch, lead, and coolant already. The steam looked like smoke (and there was smoke from the burned hose), and someone ran up and killed the disconnect at my power outlet PDQ. I was doing a long 1/2" aluminum 4G from a creeper, and rolled a wheel over the supply line, and "poof", all gone.
Steve S
Steve,
That had to be quite the surprise!
Pete
Esab SVI 300, Mig 4HD wire feeder, 30A spool gun, Miller Passport, Dynasty 300 DX, Coolmate 4, Spectrum 2050, C&K Cold Wire feeder WF-3, Black Gold Tungsten Sharperner, Prime Weld 225