I've been stick welding for a while now and have been trying many different rods. When my dad first set me up with my welding equipment, he had a large stockpile of rods that he gave me. The best by far are the ones labeled "Nassau Tartan-B". I am running low on supply and looking to restock, but I can't find them online anywhere.
Does anyone know if they are even still being made? Are they under a different name now?
Thanks for the help!
-Travis
Stick Welding Tips, Certification tests, machines, projects
Tried emailing that company asking if they sold it and haven’t gotten a response yet.Poland308 wrote:Post a pic. Especially if they have colored dots. That will help identify them if there listed under another name.
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Still looking, and found a few people selling other Nassau Rockmount rods, but not the Tartan ones. All the sellers are second hand and I can’t seem to find any retailers, so I am worried I won’t be able to restock. In the middle of a project and would really like to get my hands on a few pounds as the results are really good with the Tartan-B. None of the other type of rods I have been trying seem to work that well.
Based on what the weldit website says about Tartan-B, do you have a suggestion for a different rod to try?
Based on what the weldit website says about Tartan-B, do you have a suggestion for a different rod to try?
TraditionalToolworks
- TraditionalToolworks
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Quoted for truth.snoeproe wrote:I prefer to stick with AWS identified electrodes. You know they will always be around.
TravisC, take note.
I think it depends on what you're trying to weld. In general for stick, Lincoln Excalibur 7018 in the sealed tube is tough to beat, if you're welding various carbon/mild/A2/etc steels, 6010/6011 (if your machine will handle it) for dirty stuff and/or root passes, 6013 is not bad for general purpose...for general all purpose the Excalibur is pretty good in my book. However, there is one caveat to them, and that's they are low hydrogen and as such for code work need to be kept in an oven to keep the moisture out. Tons of people use them for non-code work and don't keep them in an oven, they work fine.TravisC wrote:Based on what the weldit website says about Tartan-B, do you have a suggestion for a different rod to try?
What type of metal are you welding?
Collector of old Iron!
Alan
Alan
Mostly 11 gauge steel tube and angle. Building a large outdoor kitchen with 4 cook stations. All the welds are on steel, the cook stations using stainless and aluminum are fabricated already and going to be riveted into the steel frame (makes them easier to pull out if the fail down the road). Probably about 3/4 done.TraditionalToolworks wrote:Quoted for truth.snoeproe wrote:I prefer to stick with AWS identified electrodes. You know they will always be around.
TravisC, take note.
TravisC wrote:Based on what the weldit website says about Tartan-B, do you have a suggestion for a different rod to try?
I think it depends on what you're trying to weld. In general for stick, Lincoln Excalibur 7018 in the sealed tube is tough to beat, if you're welding various carbon/mild/A2/etc steels, 6010/6011 (if your machine will handle it) for dirty stuff and/or root passes, 6013 is not bad for general purpose...for general all purpose the Excalibur is pretty good in my book. However, there is one caveat to them, and that's they are low hydrogen and as such for code work need to be kept in an oven to keep the moisture out. Tons of people use them for non-code work and don't keep them in an oven, they work fine.
What type of metal are you welding?
I’m a creature of habit, I find something I like and try to stick to it, and I love those Nassau Tartan-B rods. Really strong clean welds for me. Im definitely experimenting with other rods for the long term, but I was really hoping to find a few pound of it to finish this product, and I can’t exactly walk into Praxair and ask them right now...
Thought it would be relatively easy to find 10# of it online or retail somewhere, especially since it looks like Rockmount is still making it. But, I can't find it anywhere.
TraditionalToolworks
- TraditionalToolworks
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That helps, you could use several different rods for that. 7018 would probably be my choice but takes a bit to acquire the start technique.TravisC wrote:Mostly 11 gauge steel tube and angle. Building a large outdoor kitchen with 4 cook stations. All the welds are on steel, the cook stations using stainless and aluminum are fabricated already and going to be riveted into the steel frame (makes them easier to pull out if the fail down the road). Probably about 3/4 done.
I'm reluctant to recommend anything given you're 3/4 done with your project. I would probably recommend sticking to something you can get easily.TravisC wrote:I’m a creature of habit, I find something I like and try to stick to it, and I love those Nassau Tartan-B rods. Really strong clean welds for me.
You should get a lb of 6013 and see if it works ok or you. If not, get a pound of 7018, but the really good 7018 is the Excalibur and requires a 10# purchase as it's in a sealed tube to keep it fresh. I like the look of the 7018 bead, but that's my preference.
Collector of old Iron!
Alan
Alan
Well, the project turned out all right! Mostly 11 gauge Square tube and Angle turned into something very nice!
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TraditionalToolworks
- TraditionalToolworks
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Looks great Travis, I don't think it would matter if you had to pay $200 for some Tartan-B rod, I bet you wife is thrilled!
Collector of old Iron!
Alan
Alan
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