Tig welding tips, questions, equipment, applications, instructions, techniques, tig welding machines, troubleshooting tig welding process
rahtreelimbs
- rahtreelimbs
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If you are using a scratch start tig setup......no pedal.....no downslope. What is the proper way to end out a weld and avoid craters and such.
- weldin mike 27
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Speed up at the end of your bead until the pool is very narrow. Snap out and then get the torch back over the puddle quickly to give a little gas
Mike Westbrook
- Mike Westbrook
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You can always end on a tack weld
Sent from my XT1254 using Tapatalk
Sent from my XT1254 using Tapatalk
Cutting torch hammer and a full vocabulary
90 percent of everything I do is scratch start. Like this method, or if it’s real critical that you don’t get any arc marks you can always snap out along your filler wire. Use it like a ground rod.weldin mike 27 wrote:Speed up at the end of your bead until the pool is very narrow. Snap out and then get the torch back over the puddle quickly to give a little gas
I have more questions than answers
Josh
Josh
- MinnesotaDave
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If not using the good advice already given, another way is all about timing.
At the end, quickly add a few extra dabs of rod and then snap out immediately (snap back to shield the weld).
It's how I usually do it. It's how I "button off" - not sure why I call it that
At the end, quickly add a few extra dabs of rod and then snap out immediately (snap back to shield the weld).
It's how I usually do it. It's how I "button off" - not sure why I call it that
Dave J.
Beware of false knowledge; it is more dangerous than ignorance. ~George Bernard Shaw~
Syncro 350
Invertec v250-s
Thermal Arc 161 and 300
MM210
Dialarc
Tried being normal once, didn't take....I think it was a Tuesday.
Beware of false knowledge; it is more dangerous than ignorance. ~George Bernard Shaw~
Syncro 350
Invertec v250-s
Thermal Arc 161 and 300
MM210
Dialarc
Tried being normal once, didn't take....I think it was a Tuesday.
thats something i found difficult and produced a lot of swearing. mainly because the arc re-established.MinnesotaDave wrote:........... and then snap out immediately (snap back to shield the weld)...........
to stop it the arc restarting i had to hold way off, way out of range that the gas would do anything.
tweak it until it breaks
Artie F. Emm
- Artie F. Emm
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Reluctant to join the thread because i'm so far out of my depth. Would it be practical to add a normally closed foot switch to the ground cable? Stomp the switch to interrupt the ground, arc stops but gas keeps flowing.
Dave
aka "RTFM"
aka "RTFM"
(thats something i found difficult and produced a lot of swearing. mainly because the arc re-established.
to stop it the arc restarting i had to hold way off, way out of range that the gas would do anything.)
Use lift arc and turn off your high frequency.
to stop it the arc restarting i had to hold way off, way out of range that the gas would do anything.)
Use lift arc and turn off your high frequency.
I have more questions than answers
Josh
Josh
Some lift arc machines still rely on a foot pedal as an option to modulate the amperage. Lift Arc or Scratch Start is purely for machines that don't have HF start, or when you don't want to rely on HF because of out-of-postion welding. (Think moving around a large structure where you are tacking or welding, and you don't want to drag a foot pedal with you).Artie F. Emm wrote:Reluctant to join the thread because i'm so far out of my depth. Would it be practical to add a normally closed foot switch to the ground cable? Stomp the switch to interrupt the ground, arc stops but gas keeps flowing.
You could always go with a 2T or 4T torch switch. But as Poland said, if snapping out and returning to shield causes the arc to reinitiate, then you're still active on HF. LA/SS machines often have a programmed post-flow to cool the tungsten. So returning to shield the weld should not cause an arc start.
Artie F. Emm
- Artie F. Emm
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^^^ Thanks for the explanation. I see a lot depends on the individual equipment setup: I had in mind a Thunderbolt or Tombstone with a basic torch.
Dave
aka "RTFM"
aka "RTFM"
no HF on that machine. DC tig only, no pedal, no switch, no gas solenoid. its multi process so tig is a really basic add on.Poland308 wrote:(thats something i found difficult and produced a lot of swearing. mainly because the arc re-established.
to stop it the arc restarting i had to hold way off, way out of range that the gas would do anything.)
Use lift arc and turn off your high frequency.
like adding tig to an arc welder. live all the time. common sort of setup.
i found rotating the torch was the best way for me to snap off. but rotate it back it could restart, even if your an inch off the work.
ended up simply rotate and lift torch up and away, and forget about trying to cover with gas.
in the end i was so annoyed with it i got another welder with HF, pedal etc. which was good as i ended up doing aluminum.
once that gas is pulled off the work, oxides form instantly. so i fail to see the point of snapping off then putting gas back on, damage has been done. that really shows up on stainless.
this is where a run off tab is probably better. then it doesn't matter how bad the end of the weld is as its thrown away.
i think jody has a few videos on this.
tweak it until it breaks
If it’s DC TIG only, how did you do ally with it?tweake wrote: no HF on that machine. DC tig only, no pedal, no switch, no gas solenoid. its multi process so tig is a really basic add on.
like adding tig to an arc welder. live all the time. common sort of setup.
in the end i was so annoyed with it i got another welder with HF, pedal etc. which was good as i ended up doing aluminum.
once that gas is pulled off the work, oxides form instantly. so i fail to see the point of snapping off then putting gas back on, damage has been done. that really shows up on stainless.
this is where a run off tab is probably better. then it doesn't matter how bad the end of the weld is as its thrown away.
i think jody has a few videos on this.
The benefit of shielding gas on ally after the arc stops is to help cool the ally slowly, avoiding heat cracks. Also somewhat true on steel as the shielding still helps prevent oxides from entering the weld while it cools. Yep, mandatory for stainless, but still a great idea for all materials
I suspected as much; the old "bait and switch" on us! Damn tricky Kiwis Thought you had somehow developed a method to DC TIG ally without Helium and were holding the secret close to your vest.tweake wrote:i got another welder (acdc tig) and used that for aluminum.cj737 wrote: If it’s DC TIG only, how did you do ally with it?
my other welder is a multi with DC only lift tig.
- weldin mike 27
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Jody has a video of making a knife switch on the stinger cable so you can cut the current but keep the gas shielding
I’ve just run a gas valved torch that is manually opened and closed as needed. Allows pre- and post-flow control as I deem necessary. Can be a bugger to remember to open it though.weldin mike 27 wrote:Jody has a video of making a knife switch on the stinger cable so you can cut the current but keep the gas shielding
Ya one final big dab and snap out QUICK. It can be done fast enough to maintain gas coverage. Industry standard for field welding AS pipe is still a scratch start rig on an engine drive welder. I do it all the time and manage to NOT oxidize the end of a weld. It takes a lot of practice tho...
In addition to the knife switch video, Jody did this video because of a question from me (those are my pads of beads he shows in the video!!!)...use a copper spoon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=28NRNYACv9I
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=28NRNYACv9I
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