Hello brains trust, occasionally when tack welding I get a bad start where the HF arc starts inside the ceramic cup and not at the tip of the electrode. I resharpen the electrode and clean it put on a new cup and it still happens, the next day it never misses a single start. Using Miller syncrowave 350 that has good clean points set 6 thou.
cheers Rusty
Tig welding tips, questions, equipment, applications, instructions, techniques, tig welding machines, troubleshooting tig welding process
Couple ideas
1. I hate thoriated tungsten for starting, it wanders a lot and upsets me when welding wire mesh. I prefer lanthanated or ceriated
2 . Make sure everything is clean including tungsten
3. Before you strike the arc scratch the tungsten just a little bit on the material or even just touch it before you start. When you hit the pedal don’t be shy, get right into it
1. I hate thoriated tungsten for starting, it wanders a lot and upsets me when welding wire mesh. I prefer lanthanated or ceriated
2 . Make sure everything is clean including tungsten
3. Before you strike the arc scratch the tungsten just a little bit on the material or even just touch it before you start. When you hit the pedal don’t be shy, get right into it
Make sure your tungsten itself is polished shiny clean, most people pay very little attention to all the gunk or oxidation that forms on their tungsten and it directly impacts arc starts, think about it, if you've got a fine coating of aluminum on your tungsten, well, that stuff is pretty damn conductive, slightly more so than tungsten itself in fact, since HF will pretty much go wherever it likes, there's nothing stopping it from arcing off of contamination rather than the tungsten itself if the resistance is lower.
Polishing by spinning, and especially grinding that direction, is really bad. All the marks should go longitudinally. If they don't, they cause the arc to jump all over the place. Any tutorial on grinding will show you the direction the wheel needs to travel.
Think of it like this. The electricity runs down the scratches. If they point out to the sides... Guess where the arc goes?
Think of it like this. The electricity runs down the scratches. If they point out to the sides... Guess where the arc goes?
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