I’m trying to cut and macro etch some MIG-welded carbon steel T-joints to assess penetration. I have watched numerous videos on this subject on the “Welding Tips and Tricks” channel and have tried to replicate the process using Naval Jelly as an etchant. For the life of me, I can’t get results that look anything like those shown in the videos. The weld beads darken as expected, but the base metal pieces tend to remain shiny and impervious to attack by the etchant. Heating the piece helps a bit, but doesn’t come close to giving me the results I’m looking for.
Any suggestions as to how I can improve this would be greatly appreciated.
mig and flux core tips and techniques, equipment, filler metal
Mark Proulx
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Mark Proulx
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Sorry for the tardy reply. I wanted to include photos, so I had to wait to get out to the shop. The uploaded photos show what I’ve been doing. (I know that one of the beads exhibits porosity; no need to flag that.)
I’ve tried letting the jelly sit overnight; this didn’t help. I have tried heating the sample with a propane torch; this helps darken the beads but has little effect on the base pieces themselves.
When the jelly has had a chance to work, I’ll post the result.
Update at 1708 PDT. This etch worked much better than previous attempts, but it is still evident that the base pieces were still much more resistant to attack than the welds. Note the shiny spot on the leg - not etched at all. In previous specimens, this shiny finish was virtually everywhere on the T pieces. Weird.
I’ve tried letting the jelly sit overnight; this didn’t help. I have tried heating the sample with a propane torch; this helps darken the beads but has little effect on the base pieces themselves.
When the jelly has had a chance to work, I’ll post the result.
Update at 1708 PDT. This etch worked much better than previous attempts, but it is still evident that the base pieces were still much more resistant to attack than the welds. Note the shiny spot on the leg - not etched at all. In previous specimens, this shiny finish was virtually everywhere on the T pieces. Weird.
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- Etch result
- 77ADC5D3-7036-4B1F-8F83-C74553E67884.jpeg (42.59 KiB) Viewed 2104 times
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- Naval jelly applied
- 6A498F9F-AD03-45DC-89EF-6EB40F0012D7.jpeg (36.19 KiB) Viewed 2118 times
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- Random orbital, paste polis, followed by alcohol wipe
- ED65B7C3-CE31-45ED-A1C3-EB3419C13B6B.jpeg (38.1 KiB) Viewed 2118 times
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- Die grinder, blue abrasive pad
- 970918E9-3C03-4A49-B20B-2563E4726D7C.jpeg (36.88 KiB) Viewed 2118 times
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- Die grinder, red abrasive pad
- D38E951A-8E5D-4BEE-9369-98EE39657EB6.jpeg (36.28 KiB) Viewed 2118 times
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- Die grinder, 120-grit
- 2D760DF7-C0CA-4C68-AEAF-C27E6C9F7A37.jpeg (33.98 KiB) Viewed 2118 times
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- Die grinder, 80-grit
- 3D150A31-29B3-4D6D-ADEC-A189C53DA5A9.jpeg (35.75 KiB) Viewed 2118 times
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- Saw cut
- F80056B8-5A6E-4052-A356-F36BE2411FA4.jpeg (39.12 KiB) Viewed 2118 times
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- T-joint sample
- 24F9D246-EAFF-4951-B924-381DAADFCF31.jpeg (35.49 KiB) Viewed 2118 times
Last edited by Mark Proulx on Sat Oct 19, 2019 8:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
its the forum limiting the display size. open the pic in a new tab and you will get the full pic.LtBadd wrote:Oscar not sure why your pics on this forum are sometimes truncated. Maybe too high of resolution.
tweak it until it breaks
Yes this forum sucks for pics, I'm done with having two copies of my pics (one regular, and one small for this forum). A lot of other forums automatically resize. From this day forward, everybody must open my pics in a separate tab!
BillE.Dee
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don't know Oscar. I've tried al wheel brighteners and maybe the oven cleaner from wallyworld has something missing or different than E Z off brand. OR, more than likely I'm not patient enough for the stuff to work.
- weldin mike 27
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Mark Proulx
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@Oscar:
Big time thanks for the suggestion. I backed off on the shine and obtained a much better result.
Big time thanks for the suggestion. I backed off on the shine and obtained a much better result.
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- 1/4” A36 plate, .035 wire, 21.0V, 367 WFS
- 1136B16F-08C9-41DA-A54F-E774A9116D5F.jpeg (42.43 KiB) Viewed 2076 times
Mark Proulx
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Here’s another. Same parameters:
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- 4519F26D-44AA-4851-906D-16379ED1730C.jpeg (33.08 KiB) Viewed 2061 times
- weldin mike 27
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Mark Proulx
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@weldin mike 27:
That’s what I thought, too. I suspect that you’re correct regarding the use of “real” etchants.
That’s what I thought, too. I suspect that you’re correct regarding the use of “real” etchants.
Mark Proulx
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@Coldman:
I thought so too. That’s why I wiped the surface with isopropyl alcohol after polishing. It did not seem to matter.
I thought so too. That’s why I wiped the surface with isopropyl alcohol after polishing. It did not seem to matter.
Quite likely. By polishing it to a high shine you are reducing the total surface area of the base material to (close to) it's bare minimum.weldin mike 27 wrote:Funny, I read that the shinier the better. Maybe that was for professional strength etchants.
To get an acid to etch a surface like that well it needs to be high strength (or more agressive type) to work on/into the smaller surface or you will need to leave it much longer and refresh the acid often.
A somewhat more coarse surface exposes a lot more base material to the acid so a less agressive one will be able to work on the surface faster and show results/discolorations. (a bit like rust starting slow on polished steel but accelerating rapidly once it manages to start some pitting..)
A high polish and etch should be able to show up smaller (grain) differences in the metal though (and then under a magnifier/microscope), but probably be overkill for an individual just wanting to check some of his welds and not some metallurgic lab..
Bye, Arno.
- weldin mike 27
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Thanks Arno. Yep, the difference being the controlled stuff that scientists and professionals use compared to home gamer stuff that happens to etch.
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