I want to build up the sides on one of my tire spoons which I forged from combination wrenches to make the 17mm spoon end have the same shape as the 24mm spoon.
What filler rod would I use for this unknown Home Despot brand tool steel?
Tig welding tips, questions, equipment, applications, instructions, techniques, tig welding machines, troubleshooting tig welding process
- Wood Welder
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- TireSpoons0223.jpg (16.25 KiB) Viewed 1611 times
Lincoln 100 amp transformer MIG w/flux core wire
HF TIG w/no pedal for steel & stainless, Stick w/3/32 6011,7018
Formerly: Victor O/A and Lincoln 225 AC buzz box
Looking to upgrade
Bikes-XR250, CRF230
HF TIG w/no pedal for steel & stainless, Stick w/3/32 6011,7018
Formerly: Victor O/A and Lincoln 225 AC buzz box
Looking to upgrade
Bikes-XR250, CRF230
Id think that is a steel alloy, some of the high end tools are tool steels or high carbon steels.
Maybe try some 7018 stick rod, peen it often...
Maybe try some 7018 stick rod, peen it often...
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
Likely to have chrome and vanadium in it as well as higher carbon content. Not meant to be welded and will likely crack under prying load. I have welded up a shifting spanner (I think you call it a monkey wrench) with 7018 years ago, no peening and has held for years with normal hand loading. Wouldn't trust it for anything else.
Flat out like a lizard drinkin'
- Wood Welder
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I was thinking of using some 309L then grinding it smooth.
Lincoln 100 amp transformer MIG w/flux core wire
HF TIG w/no pedal for steel & stainless, Stick w/3/32 6011,7018
Formerly: Victor O/A and Lincoln 225 AC buzz box
Looking to upgrade
Bikes-XR250, CRF230
HF TIG w/no pedal for steel & stainless, Stick w/3/32 6011,7018
Formerly: Victor O/A and Lincoln 225 AC buzz box
Looking to upgrade
Bikes-XR250, CRF230
kiwi2wheels
- kiwi2wheels
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I've always used 309 / 309L when I've had to put together a special wrench or socket, never any problems.
Whats your avatar, 1969 T 120 ?
Whats your avatar, 1969 T 120 ?
noddybrian
- noddybrian
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Of choice I would use 312 though 309 normally works - as I only had use of tig when the shops one was quiet I never bought any proper filler - just beat the flux off Esab Almat rod for similar jobs ! now I've had my own for a while I probably should get a better range of filler - I do the same with pure nickel the odd time I need to build up cast manifolds & the like - trouble is over here tig rod is hard to find other than the mundane & is stupidly expensive plus often only in larger quantities than I'd like to keep.
- Wood Welder
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Hi Kiwi, It's a 1968 Bonneville in pristine condition, owned by my bro-in-law. I photographed it last Thanksgiving. The tank was recently painted but the frame has never been touched. It still has the made in england decal on the frame head. I'm more of an off-roader doing long trips in Baja.
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- 1968BonnyEngine1567.jpg (38 KiB) Viewed 1519 times
Lincoln 100 amp transformer MIG w/flux core wire
HF TIG w/no pedal for steel & stainless, Stick w/3/32 6011,7018
Formerly: Victor O/A and Lincoln 225 AC buzz box
Looking to upgrade
Bikes-XR250, CRF230
HF TIG w/no pedal for steel & stainless, Stick w/3/32 6011,7018
Formerly: Victor O/A and Lincoln 225 AC buzz box
Looking to upgrade
Bikes-XR250, CRF230
kiwi2wheels
- kiwi2wheels
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Tom Osselton
- Tom Osselton
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Nice to see, the new models can't hold a candle to the old bikes!Wood Welder wrote:Hi Kiwi, It's a 1968 Bonneville in pristine condition, owned by my bro-in-law. I photographed it last Thanksgiving. The tank was recently painted but the frame has never been touched. It still has the made in england decal on the frame head. I'm more of an off-roader doing long trips in Baja.
kiwi2wheels
- kiwi2wheels
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They are an insult to the name !!!Tom Osselton wrote:Nice to see, the new models can't hold a candle to the old bikes!Wood Welder wrote:Hi Kiwi, It's a 1968 Bonneville in pristine condition, owned by my bro-in-law. I photographed it last Thanksgiving. The tank was recently painted but the frame has never been touched. It still has the made in england decal on the frame head. I'm more of an off-roader doing long trips in Baja.
Mind you, with their weight, they'd make good boat anchors ...........
Tom Osselton
- Tom Osselton
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I have a 73 750 Norton Commando HighRider and a 63 Bsa B40, 350 single that I hope to start working on soon they have been neglected for years.kiwi2wheels wrote:It's an insult to the name !!!Tom Osselton wrote:Nice to see, the new models can't hold a candle to the old bikes!Wood Welder wrote:Hi Kiwi, It's a 1968 Bonneville in pristine condition, owned by my bro-in-law. I photographed it last Thanksgiving. The tank was recently painted but the frame has never been touched. It still has the made in england decal on the frame head. I'm more of an off-roader doing long trips in Baja.
Mind you, with their weight, they'd make good boat anchors ...........
I had a 74 T100R that I bored out .010 and was ready to put back togeather when my son was born. But due to med bills I had to sell it. Even had the stuff to convert it to electronic ignition.
I have more questions than answers
Josh
Josh
my 72 bonny
came to me in a basket
took a year...
craig
came to me in a basket
took a year...
craig
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- IMG_0143 72 triumph.jpg (121.55 KiB) Viewed 1271 times
htp invertig 221
syncrowave 250
miller 140 mig
hypertherm plasma
morse 14 metal devil
syncrowave 250
miller 140 mig
hypertherm plasma
morse 14 metal devil
Tom Osselton
- Tom Osselton
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- Wood Welder
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Thanks for the advice. I went with .045" 309L because I just didn't know if this little project would be worth more exotic filler metals. I wonder how those high nickel/cromium/molybdenum rods weld.
For the most part the beads are pretty bad even though I did get some straw color in a couple places. The beads got pretty wide in a couple spots as the 1/16" ceriated tungsten got balled up so I'm going to take advantage of this by putting the spoon in my two-brick forge and mash the beads down to widen them. Stress relief is an added bonus. I did alternate from side to side with each pass. This HF welder is more of a scratch-start machine than lift-start at the lower amperages. In hindsight, it may have been easier to build up the waist when it was a thicker combo wrench, then start the forging process.
And I don't mind getting off topic one bit as long as it's interesting. Thanks for sharing.
Here's a BSA I photographed at the famous Rock Store, also right hand shift:
For the most part the beads are pretty bad even though I did get some straw color in a couple places. The beads got pretty wide in a couple spots as the 1/16" ceriated tungsten got balled up so I'm going to take advantage of this by putting the spoon in my two-brick forge and mash the beads down to widen them. Stress relief is an added bonus. I did alternate from side to side with each pass. This HF welder is more of a scratch-start machine than lift-start at the lower amperages. In hindsight, it may have been easier to build up the waist when it was a thicker combo wrench, then start the forging process.
And I don't mind getting off topic one bit as long as it's interesting. Thanks for sharing.
Here's a BSA I photographed at the famous Rock Store, also right hand shift:
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- BSA
- BSA0681.jpg (75.4 KiB) Viewed 1256 times
Lincoln 100 amp transformer MIG w/flux core wire
HF TIG w/no pedal for steel & stainless, Stick w/3/32 6011,7018
Formerly: Victor O/A and Lincoln 225 AC buzz box
Looking to upgrade
Bikes-XR250, CRF230
HF TIG w/no pedal for steel & stainless, Stick w/3/32 6011,7018
Formerly: Victor O/A and Lincoln 225 AC buzz box
Looking to upgrade
Bikes-XR250, CRF230
Tom Osselton
- Tom Osselton
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Joined:Sat Aug 15, 2015 12:33 am
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Location:Calgary Alberta
I had a 49 BSA 250 cc about 30 years ago that was stolen from the backyard still have some parts though.Wood Welder wrote:Thanks for the advice. I went with .045" 309L because I just didn't know if this little project would be worth more exotic filler metals. I wonder how those high nickel/cromium/molybdenum rods weld.
For the most part the beads are pretty bad even though I did get some straw color in a couple places. The beads got pretty wide in a couple spots as the 1/16" ceriated tungsten got balled up so I'm going to take advantage of this by putting the spoon in my two-brick forge and mash the beads down to widen them. Stress relief is an added bonus. I did alternate from side to side with each pass. This HF welder is more of a scratch-start machine than lift-start at the lower amperages. In hindsight, it may have been easier to build up the waist when it was a thicker combo wrench, then start the forging process.
And I don't mind getting off topic one bit as long as it's interesting. Thanks for sharing.
Here's a BSA I photographed at the famous Rock Store, also right hand shift:
I had a 49 BSA 250 cc about 30 years ago that was stolen from the backyard still have some parts though.
Tom Osselton
that sounds like the start of a new project bike to me!
craig
Tom Osselton
that sounds like the start of a new project bike to me!
craig
htp invertig 221
syncrowave 250
miller 140 mig
hypertherm plasma
morse 14 metal devil
syncrowave 250
miller 140 mig
hypertherm plasma
morse 14 metal devil
- Wood Welder
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Joined:Mon Jun 20, 2016 4:53 pm
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Location:Southern California
Here's one in Baja, Mexico. It's a disc front brake model so after '72. This was turned down by our friend who restores these. It has the tube connecting between the head pipes.
- Attachments
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- Triumph1187.jpg (72.8 KiB) Viewed 1158 times
Lincoln 100 amp transformer MIG w/flux core wire
HF TIG w/no pedal for steel & stainless, Stick w/3/32 6011,7018
Formerly: Victor O/A and Lincoln 225 AC buzz box
Looking to upgrade
Bikes-XR250, CRF230
HF TIG w/no pedal for steel & stainless, Stick w/3/32 6011,7018
Formerly: Victor O/A and Lincoln 225 AC buzz box
Looking to upgrade
Bikes-XR250, CRF230
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