- Видео 17
- Просмотров 15 141
Precision tig welding
Добавлен 3 сен 2021
Welding, fabrication and life
Видео
Tig welding with Pure argon vs argon helium mix on aluminum
Просмотров 11811 дней назад
Pure argon vs argon helium mix on aluminum
Primeweld 325x on harbor freight welding cart.
Просмотров 89820 дней назад
Primeweld fixture table review
Просмотров 23326 дней назад
Welding thick 2 1/2” aluminum with 250 amps and a 5% helium mix
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.27 дней назад
Custom hand prop for prime weld fixture table
Просмотров 11027 дней назад
0.92 sheet metal tig weld
Просмотров 47328 дней назад
Welding 0.92 wall sheet metal
Просмотров 4529 дней назад
Mad scientist does it again! Bucket truck conversation!
Просмотров 16Месяц назад
240 amp carbon steel pipe cover pass arc shot.
Просмотров 18Месяц назад
Diy marking tool
Просмотров 31Месяц назад
Laying out intake runner 90s the easy way with primeweld fixture table!
Просмотров 8 тыс.Месяц назад
Walking the cup tig welding on carbon steel pipe
Просмотров 677Месяц назад
Welding aluminum with everlast 250ex
Просмотров 672Месяц назад
I blew up a brand new ck torch on a miller tansformer machine last year. Sounded like a gun shot when the hose blew! Took it back and they swapped it out. Something with the water hose was faulty
Thanks for the review, their customer service is definitely top notch. 👍
Where did you get the cart from?
Harbor Freight Vulcan with some mods, he's got a video short on it and the mod for the cooler
cooooooool man keep it up 😍 do u post videos while making it ?
Interesting. I only weld mild and stainless without any issue in regards to arc marks. Wonder if it's an aluminum-only issue.
Try 5/32, 3/16 or even 1/4 inch tungsten, the larger diameter tungsten can handle more current and have greater heat input into the part because it can distribute the heat more effectively. I agree as well that helium definitely helps with thicker aluminum. Helium has a higher thermal conductivity than argon thus inputting more heat into the part. Helium has higher ionization potential than argon thus it require more energy to ionize helium and produces a hotter arc. And dont forget too since helium is less dense than Argon it will require slightly higher CFH to achieve proper shielding. Amd you should look into a gas mixer for properly mixing argon and helium mixtures because it blends the argon and helium more accurately to the proper proportions of your specified mixture and achieving optimal high quality welds.
6061 likes to crack when you bend it on a press brake or bend it in general, 5052 would be an excellent choice if you wanted to bend as much of it as possible
Any pipe welding videos coming?
What kind of band saw is that in the background?
@@vw3800 delta
Id say it 3000hp max 😂
Do the arc marks happen if welding steel or just the aluminum?
How much did the bottle of helium cost you? Manifold looks killer. I’ve always wanted to try some helium mixed in.
@@thedude6650 i want ti say around $125 i think a 125 size is $250
I appreciate you posting this, no information anywhere on what carts will fit the 325X. Most carts available have trays that are too small!
Nice video! I've had that same problem with arc marks on aluminum with all 3 tables I've had, one rolled steel, one bare cast iron and one coated tool steel. The coated table does it more than the others. The only thing that's worked for me is to ground directly to an aluminum plate on the table or to the part.
Do the arc marks happen when welding steel/stainless steel or just aluminum? I just bought one of these tables but it hasn't shipped yet.
Helium? Sounds good. However aren’t we (as a planet) running out of helium? If everyone starts using it for welding the price will soon go up. But it’s a great looking weld!
Thats why they dont use it anymore tig welding was first known as heliarc welding but because of the cost they started using argon because the gas companies had it as a byproduct from making oxygen and it was cheaper
With shop dawg
Made in China 😂😅
I remember a time where walking the cup would get you fired. The heat softens the copper and so as you drag that across much harder steel, it contaminates the joint. Im aware that copper won't fuse to steel like that, however that's part of the problem, if any of that copper gets trapped it's gonna light up like Christmas on an X-ray test. Seen it cost companies literal millions in rework and wasted materials.
What is the coper coming from?
@Sp_Tremor6.7ho are you for real? The fuckin cup is copper 😂. And the video shows it dragging across much harder steel. This used to be a basic massive no no
@ sorry 😂 but thecups are not copper! They are high temp ceramic! 😂😂😂😂😂
@@Precisiontigwelding then things have changed! Nevermind me!