AGA Historical Archives - Flame straightening in welding - English

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  • Опубликовано: 20 дек 2017
  • Flame straightening in welding. Video from our Historical Archives where we collect older videos that may still be of interest to welders and the welding community.
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Комментарии • 140

  • @davematthews414
    @davematthews414 Год назад +33

    Excellent video. I worked at a company that used to build and repair semi-trailers. We had one come in that had been rolled in an accident. I watched in awe as one of the old guys went to work on the 24" deep chassis rails with a torch and a wet rag... two days later the 45 degree lengthwise twist was gone, and it was as good as new. in all directions Watching that guy unscrew this huge chunk of twisted, bent steel was mind blowing. Pure skill. And for those commenters that think this doesn't work, or that say they have tried it and it didn't work for them, try to remember that there is a great deal of skill, experience, and understanding required to do this well. Don't expect to be able to watch a RUclips video and suddenly be able to pull this off. Stick with it, read, gain some more understanding, and you will get better.

  • @valkman761
    @valkman761 Год назад +2

    These old ones have the genuine feel to it. Props to the one picking the tunes in the intro in one minute mark 😂. Modern films would not even be made, but if so, it would be full of warning signs

  • @mpetersen6
    @mpetersen6 2 года назад +65

    I used to work for a company that builds and services centrifuges for the waste treatment, food and oil recovery industries. Machines are built out of a magnetic grade of stainless for major structural components. Sometimes due to wear or high vibration issues we would have bores for bearings get out of round. We would use a similiar technique to shrink the high sides of the bore to bring it back into spec and eliminate boring and sleeving.

    • @kennedy67951
      @kennedy67951 Год назад +5

      Yes, and what fun I had doing all the things pertaining to WELDING and PIPEFITTING. I'm Old now and can not do those things any more. Your Story just brought me back to the day's of youth. Thanks Mate for sharing this little part of your life with me. I really do appreciate it very much.

    • @GoingtoHecq
      @GoingtoHecq Год назад +1

      That's incredible and almost hard to believe!

    • @andiem6669
      @andiem6669 Год назад +1

      I wouldn’t of thought so as wear does not equal bent

  • @jackking5567
    @jackking5567 Год назад +31

    A historical version of this was carried out in Newcastle upon Tyne in England. The famous arched Tyne Bridge was nearing completion of the arched shape but the two sides failed to meet up - it was a negligible amount but enough to prevent the two sides being joined. A series of bonfires were lit along the arched girders to alter the shape slightly. The series of fires created enough change and both sides could be joined together.

  • @the_hate_inside1085
    @the_hate_inside1085 Год назад +8

    My father was the site manager of an AGA acetylene factory in Luleå, in northern Sweden. It was closed down due to a decrease in the demand for this type of gas. In my profession as a metal worker, I have used these methods to straighten out welded structures.

  • @sidehop
    @sidehop 3 года назад +35

    What a wonderful well-made video! I know it's older but this was VERY easy to understand!

  • @yodabatface
    @yodabatface Год назад +3

    One of the hottest days of the year and I was doing this today, straightening a 50mm plated beam with a 30mm camber

  • @davidrussell8689
    @davidrussell8689 5 лет назад +28

    Very clear info on a little known process . 👍

  • @4dirt2racer0
    @4dirt2racer0 Год назад +1

    wtf?? iv worked with metal all my life how in the hell is this the first time im hearing about this..??? thanks for the video guys

  • @asw19B100
    @asw19B100 Год назад +3

    Working at a CMU production facility I observed a loaded palletizer drop from a substantial height deforming a 6 or 8 inch channel approximately 6’-7’ long approximately 4”. The company welder straightened it perfectly using an acetylene rosebud. I have attempted to do similar things but haven’t understood the various techniques sufficiently to be consistently successful. This video has been a huge help.

    • @getoffthegames89
      @getoffthegames89 Год назад

      It’s about restraining the expansion while heating and then allowing the cooling material to naturally shrink when cooling edit: lol that’s what the video is about lol sorry I commented before watching

  • @flyzeyefab
    @flyzeyefab 9 месяцев назад

    I've been working with metal a number of years... Although old, this is FANTASTIC information. Kind of wish I learned more about it years ago! Thank you!

  • @santiagokof
    @santiagokof 3 года назад +14

    This is a type of work people dont know much about it, even me this video blew my mind for real. These people are artists.

  • @a-fl-man640
    @a-fl-man640 2 года назад +6

    been doing metal fab all my life and this is the first time i've heard of this technique. interesting.

  • @MrMopar413
    @MrMopar413 Год назад +5

    I used to build drivelines for a heavy equipment manufacturer and every driveline had to be checked after welding. I used a oxyacetylene torch and dial indicators and it didn’t take much heat to get those drivelines to snap into zero runout. It’s amazing that at least in thinner steel it doesn’t take much heat to have them move into place.

    • @chrisbanning413
      @chrisbanning413 Год назад +2

      Same when straightening boat prop shafts

    • @MrMopar413
      @MrMopar413 Год назад +1

      @@chrisbanning413 yep👍

  • @plasmahead2
    @plasmahead2 4 года назад +12

    This is one of if not the best vids ive ever seen on the topic. Well played and Thank you!

  • @XantheFIN
    @XantheFIN Год назад +1

    This video learned me something totally new i never knew.

  • @andiem6669
    @andiem6669 Год назад +1

    Can’t believe I added this video to watch later

  • @EddieVBlueIsland
    @EddieVBlueIsland Год назад

    Great presentation

  • @hanshima_
    @hanshima_ 4 года назад +2

    Fantastic content, thanks for sharing.

  • @simoneagar4704
    @simoneagar4704 5 лет назад +3

    Informative and appreciated, thanks for posting this. Has me subscribing.

  • @willi80636
    @willi80636 Год назад

    Excellent video, thanks for sharing. 👍🏼

  • @kjmclark
    @kjmclark 5 лет назад +11

    Brilliant. From other videos, I had the idea that resisting the expansion bending from heating was helpful, but flame straightening would still work without it. I was wondering why I wasn't getting good results. Now I know.

  • @waitemc
    @waitemc Год назад

    I'm going to try to flame straighten my wife out tonight , thank guys👍

  • @MetrologyEngineer
    @MetrologyEngineer 4 года назад +2

    Subscribed immediately after seeing your channel name! I knew it would be my kind of channel before even watching the video. Watching the video just affermed my prediction. Thanks for the video!!!

  • @clintcowles7563
    @clintcowles7563 Год назад

    This is awesome. I'm interested. We had nothing like this anywhere around me growing up. I feel like I've missed something. I've got to learn more. Awesome video.

  • @ssvawhaleyville7577
    @ssvawhaleyville7577 3 года назад +4

    I did this for over a year at Newport News ship yard building an Aircraft Carrier. Talk about some long and slow days.

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 Год назад

      yah sounds like really boring work.

  • @thingman100
    @thingman100 3 года назад +7

    I wish I had learned this earlier! Would've helped out for sure

  • @Lagrange00
    @Lagrange00 Год назад +1

    I’m not a welder and probably will never have any kind of use for this but this is so cool

  • @brettheilman7969
    @brettheilman7969 Год назад

    I'm a journeyman steel fabricator, good video ......

  • @mishasheludniak2578
    @mishasheludniak2578 Год назад

    I'm a welder and this information is very important for me

  • @mulespur4806
    @mulespur4806 4 года назад +8

    We do this in fence building but instead of heat from flame we weld a bead on half till it gets where I need it may take 2 or 3 beads but works perfectly

  • @mikecrawford5331
    @mikecrawford5331 Год назад

    Great video!

  • @BasementEngineer
    @BasementEngineer Год назад +3

    Just a caution: Before applying any heat to any structural member, the type of the steel and its heat treated condition, to be so treated, had better be known.
    In which case the straightening temperatures must not exceed the final tempering temperature of the steel.
    To ignore this may seriously weaken the structure.

  • @noneofabove5586
    @noneofabove5586 Год назад +1

    I wish this was shown to me years ago!

  • @ogaugeclockwork4407
    @ogaugeclockwork4407 Год назад

    This is excellent!

  • @Darkstar.....
    @Darkstar..... Год назад +1

    wow that was awesome. What a lucky break a querk of metal helps manufacturing to get out of jail cheap on jobs. I find it fascinating.

  • @MetrologyEngineer
    @MetrologyEngineer 4 года назад +1

    8:27 One of my favorite shots of it!

  • @littlehills739
    @littlehills739 Год назад

    like how u include the bending as well would be nice to learn that

  • @dhananjaychaudhary3063
    @dhananjaychaudhary3063 2 года назад +1

    Awesome technique

  • @peteragurkis3590
    @peteragurkis3590 Год назад

    This is a game changer

  • @Cutlerylover4life1
    @Cutlerylover4life1 Год назад

    this looks like a video a science class would watch on a CRT tv in the classroom in the 90's

  • @herzogwolfmusic8098
    @herzogwolfmusic8098 Год назад

    That is actually so Beautiful

  • @paulmorrey733
    @paulmorrey733 2 года назад

    Great video Thanks

  • @mohammadhoseinb4395
    @mohammadhoseinb4395 6 лет назад

    thanks i like all of videoes

  • @TCS86
    @TCS86 Год назад

    We’d put camber in huge bridge girders and straighten columns in our fab shop. We had 4 rosebuds on a Hugo that would walk the length of the column . Using LP would give us the heat.

  • @efrainmartinez6623
    @efrainmartinez6623 5 лет назад +1

    Best video

  • @BurninSven1
    @BurninSven1 Год назад

    Yup good stuff from Sweden

  • @Joseph-vj2ph
    @Joseph-vj2ph 4 года назад +3

    Awesome video! I feel bad for the guy at Lavateck. No eye protection.

    • @thetruth156real3
      @thetruth156real3 Год назад

      Typical of today’s wish washy attitudes in engineering,, the most important part to you was the lack of eye protection, secondary getting the job done and being competitive. There’s many companies gone out of business with excellent apparent safety records.

  • @kennedy67951
    @kennedy67951 Год назад +4

    I used this technique in AUTU-BODY WORK, also used it as a PIPE-FITTER and WELDER to Match Up PIPE JOINTS for High Quality Fit-Ups for Welding plus used to Straighten or Curve Pipe or Beams to meet certain fit-up criteria. Very good Video. Well worth watching. I saved a lot of Pipefitters Butt's by using this method when their Math was off. (LOL)

  • @conwaymildon4411
    @conwaymildon4411 Год назад

    Cant forget the old school ways of doing things

  • @christianlagioia
    @christianlagioia Год назад +1

    1 week and i go for my mig/mag level 1 practical exam :) .. that t-split pipe , on theoretical exam, they want me to write that the way to do it is pre-bend the larger pipe so that after welding the pipe straitens .. flame straitening seems a much better solution to that particular scenario .. but im new so..

  • @ShowCat1
    @ShowCat1 Год назад

    very interesting

  • @boltonky
    @boltonky Год назад +1

    Such and informative video, if only oxy acetylene was easy to store and cheap i would use it so much...as a welder and lpg torch only go so far.
    Thanks for the upload, why don't they do these kind of videos anymore

    • @TheMadHatter626
      @TheMadHatter626 Год назад

      Lpg/mapgas and oxygen is pretty close to oxy acetylene temp. Oxy lpg/mapgas can do everything but weld steel, something to do with the chemistry reaction when welding but doesn't seem to matter when cutting though.

    • @arisskarpetis
      @arisskarpetis Год назад +1

      There are electrical tools that use induction heating to create a coin-sized hot spot on the metal surface, much like what the workers were doing on the sheet metal.
      ruclips.net/video/rJXeD2_eLm0/видео.html

  • @CapeFrank57
    @CapeFrank57 3 года назад

    What is the method to fix a twisted boom on a tractor backhoe at the bucket area?
    Great video
    Thanks

  • @Belle_welds
    @Belle_welds 6 лет назад +6

    I came to this info video. I see myself playing this in front of my class if i ever become a "welder teacher"! Lol

  • @africanelectron751
    @africanelectron751 Год назад +1

    I could imagine a combination of 3d scanning and computer calculations could be handy

  • @bobbowie5334
    @bobbowie5334 Год назад

    Industrial art.

  • @abovegroundgarage
    @abovegroundgarage Год назад

    My 1cm rod also extends lengthwise

  • @ikesquirrel
    @ikesquirrel 3 года назад

    Now do a video on metal temper and how heating can change it.

  • @gustavovalecillos8849
    @gustavovalecillos8849 2 года назад

    Uwe is Gustavo Valecillos I have years trying to faind yourself now I found you great friend

  • @eduardobarragan3960
    @eduardobarragan3960 2 года назад +4

    It mentioned an "AGA" handbook any idea if its availble for purchase ?

  • @mrsaizo0000
    @mrsaizo0000 Год назад

    I live in the same place where AGA and Dalén is..

  • @mrderek6917
    @mrderek6917 Год назад

    Easiest way to finish with a straight job is to set a bend in it before welding. Easy said than done because on a fresh job you had to guesstimate the bend that would take place the more you do it the better you get

  • @Luzt.
    @Luzt. Год назад +1

    The arrows at 6:05 are wrong. Some parts of the beam are stretched and some are compressed. Somewhere in the middle the material is not subjected to any stress.

  • @4dirt2racer0
    @4dirt2racer0 Год назад

    if it contracts with at least 2 tons worth of force, how much does that same material expand when evenly heated

  • @chauvinemmons
    @chauvinemmons Год назад +1

    I didn't see you using any water like to pull a panel tight we would heat it and then take a hose and spiral our way to the center quickly causing it to contract and pull tight.

  • @stuarth43
    @stuarth43 3 года назад +2

    sometimes you said expand, when you should have said shrink, when you cherry red heat the metal expands but as it cools it shrinks, if you apply water or a wet cloth it'll shrink more

  • @manxman8008
    @manxman8008 Год назад +1

    Excellent training info -- should the pipe bending have had a constraint?

  • @joepiejaapie
    @joepiejaapie 2 года назад

    does anyone have the name or a link of the original soundtrack, in the first minute?

  • @GilmerJohn
    @GilmerJohn Год назад

    I wonder whether "water quenching" is routinely used with flame straightening routinely.

    • @mitchdenner9743
      @mitchdenner9743 Год назад

      Since i didn't see much of it in this video, I'm guessing no. I'm sure on thin sheetmetal it is used more, also air guns are used to cool. Alot of the heavy ship weldments and heat treated steels would not benefit from quenching and could change the temper.

  • @bootman199
    @bootman199 4 года назад +1

    Should you use water to cool it? or will you get better results from letting it naturally cool?

    • @Narza85
      @Narza85 4 года назад +1

      It will harden if you cool it with water, and lose its quality.

    • @TriptychVNS
      @TriptychVNS 3 года назад

      I think if you let it cool naturally it will go back how it was, and you don't want that. You can also cool with the air, use the air compressor.

    • @tomasmerino1039
      @tomasmerino1039 2 года назад +2

      @@Narza85 not all metals would harden if quenched... Mild steel won't. Copper would soften (or rather anneal)

    • @GilmerJohn
      @GilmerJohn Год назад

      @@Narza85 -- Could you then "anneal" it with re-heating to a lower temperature?

  • @TheNefastor
    @TheNefastor Год назад +3

    I just love old corporate training videos. They are always 99% meat 1% fat. These days, anything on RUclips wastes at least 50% of your time with sponsors, ads and trying to be funny or cool instead of just informative.

  • @user-bg3fp4uu2i
    @user-bg3fp4uu2i 5 лет назад

    12:00

  • @user-bg3fp4uu2i
    @user-bg3fp4uu2i 5 лет назад

    7:44

  • @bigbadangelo949
    @bigbadangelo949 2 года назад

    Sick shit

  • @Narza85
    @Narza85 4 года назад

    Stainless bends way more than standard "black" steel when you heat/weld it. :z

    • @kmccurdy21
      @kmccurdy21 4 года назад

      Turbojuugend never seizes to amaze me how much it moves

    • @Narza85
      @Narza85 4 года назад

      @@kmccurdy21 I once welded a ladder from stainless tube. Omg the bendz 😱

  • @user-bg3fp4uu2i
    @user-bg3fp4uu2i 5 лет назад

    11:26

  • @Qusin111
    @Qusin111 Год назад

    at 2:40 it can be reversed by rolling or drawing but whatever

  • @beefchicken
    @beefchicken Год назад +1

    Interesting language: the narrator says "the right equipment in the hands of _qualified_ personnel", instead of "the right equipment in the hands of _skilled_ personnel". One gives the credit to the employer, the other gives the credit to the worker.

  • @TheZoneTakesYou
    @TheZoneTakesYou Год назад

    14:04 A Set Ah Lean

  • @andiem6669
    @andiem6669 Год назад

    Also wtf why does metal contract more than expands ??

    • @Alloneword-cp2xw
      @Alloneword-cp2xw Год назад +1

      I wrote a reply, but then I thought it was bullshit, so I deleted it. I've no idea mate 🤦🏻‍♂ Something to do with the movement of atoms at different temperatures? 🤷‍♂

  • @user-bg3fp4uu2i
    @user-bg3fp4uu2i 5 лет назад +1

    9:39

  • @user-jt5vm3mi1w
    @user-jt5vm3mi1w Год назад

    welding is just app now

  • @Hitman-ds1ei
    @Hitman-ds1ei Год назад

    AGA now Linde

  • @vicferrari9380
    @vicferrari9380 3 года назад +2

    I ask the OP. Maybe is a regional thing but every time you talk about sheet metal you say you are stretching it. By my understanding and what you show you are SHRINKING the spots not expanding them.

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 Год назад +1

      yes the result is it shrinks and put's tensile forces in to the piece . so " stretching" it . it's just like tightening a drum head . tensile force = stretch

  • @lucifermorningstar1274
    @lucifermorningstar1274 Год назад

    i watched that for about 10 seconds and dont ever do that
    when you heat metal up you change the structure of the metal that makes it strong
    test it out for your self heat up a 1 foot bar red hot in the middle then let it cool down put it in a vice and try to bend it
    it will bend where you heated it up and no where else

    • @joashparker8271
      @joashparker8271 Год назад

      It depends on the type of steel.

    • @Zonkotron
      @Zonkotron Год назад

      And not only the type of steel but also what has been done to it previously. Cold rolled or drawn ? Sure ! Rebar - i.e. partially quenched steels of mild hardenability....sure. Thin section of mild steel that maybe got quenched at the mill and got a bit pearlitic....yep. But some giant bridge member that took half an hour to cool to black in the steel Mill ?? No way. That stuff is not getting any softer.

    • @lucifermorningstar1274
      @lucifermorningstar1274 Год назад

      @@joashparker8271 no it dont

    • @lucifermorningstar1274
      @lucifermorningstar1274 Год назад

      @@Zonkotron nope you heat it its messed up after that test it your self

  • @fatumschy
    @fatumschy 3 года назад

    Why does he say acetylene so weird?

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 Год назад +2

      sounds correct to me. are you from the south or west ? how do you say it.?

  • @travischm
    @travischm 3 года назад

    Great video. Ironically, found this while doing my bible study. Fascinating, considering you want your foundation beams to be straight.
    Luk 12:49-50 "I am come to send fire on the earth; and what will I, if it be already kindled?
    But I have a baptism to be baptized with; and how am I straitened till it be accomplished!"

    • @patverum9051
      @patverum9051 2 года назад +2

      Or not, most roof beams have built-in bends so that under load they will be straight.

  • @TriptychVNS
    @TriptychVNS 3 года назад

    Only one flaw in this video - almost no information on methods on how to cool steel down after the heating process. As I understood, if you not cool it down, it will bend back.

    • @ulfg1409
      @ulfg1409 3 года назад +2

      Done right, it will not go back, so just letting it slow cool is fine. The hot area shrinks as it cools down and pulls in the direction you want it to go. Sometimes you may want to put it under some tension to prevent it from expanding in the wrong direction when heated (the weight of the metal can be plenty of force), you heat until soft so once you get that far it has no force to expand, and then it shrinks as it cools down = goes the direction you want.

    • @TriptychVNS
      @TriptychVNS 3 года назад +1

      @@ulfg1409 just recently I've been trying to straighten the HSS beam that bowed becose of the weld, and it pull it when I want it, but got back into almost the same state when cools off. So I had to put tremendous weight on the top of the beam, and use the cool air to cool it off so it won't go back and it helped

    • @ShainAndrews
      @ShainAndrews Год назад +1

      @@TriptychVNS Never heat HSS. Second you do that you changed it's properties and is no longer rated for the application.

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 Год назад +1

      @@ShainAndrews HSS is not high strength steel. it means Hollow Steel Section.

    • @ShainAndrews
      @ShainAndrews Год назад +1

      @@ronblack7870 Doh... You are correct... so am I. But you are on topic where as I went off into the rhubarb.

  • @atishmadhavi5389
    @atishmadhavi5389 3 года назад

    Inglish flame

  • @tilliesinabottle
    @tilliesinabottle 3 года назад

    a-set-a-lean lol the narrator really over pronounces some of these words

  • @user-sn7pn7gk5z
    @user-sn7pn7gk5z Год назад

    Christ broke your curse, disaster, the power of hell on the cross. Christ paid for all your sins on the cross and broke Satan's head. If you believe in Christ, you will be freed forever from sin, hell, and Satan's power and become a child of God. Believe in Jesus. He is God the Creator.

    • @goldar4846
      @goldar4846 Год назад

      Jesus is the work of the devil. If you believe in Christ, you worship Satan.

  • @the_chomper
    @the_chomper Год назад

    this video is pure garbage, youre not picking 2 tons up with that contraction. in fact your probably going to lengthen that rod if anything. 2 no one does this.... at all. a waste of time and money to flame straighten anything because while you can straighten it you are also severely weakening it. might as well just cut out whatever is bent and replace it for a 10th the cost.

  • @alexslater506
    @alexslater506 11 месяцев назад

    This is technology of 1970 year. I think today it is not used

  • @simpleman283
    @simpleman283 Год назад

    12:25