Or, is this that kind of thing that does not happen to you?
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_e_biggrin.gif)
Yep. It happens.Xtapolapocetl wrote:What do you do when the two pieces, instead of fusing together nicely, violently separate, creating a hole? In my, ahem, experiments, the hole didn't get larger than a certain size, but it was still pretty hard to fill it in. I tried lowering the amps to an absolute minimum, and working around the perimeter to close the hole. It wasn't easy at all, but it seemed like a possible approach. What do experts do in such cases?
Or, is this that kind of thing that does not happen to you?
I used the low amps when I was trying to fill the hole in. With normal welding current, the metal on the perimeter would melt and the filler rod would only add to the "donut" around the hole. I was trying to heat up tiny fragments of the edge to gradually close it in.MinnesotaDave wrote:Going slow, at low amps, is not your friend.
VERY INFORMATIVEOscar wrote:For 2mm pieces, depending on what you set your machine at in terms of the AC welding parameters, you might need anywhere from ~1.5 times the welding amperage and higher for the initial tacks. Minnesota Dave did those with 230A, but his machine is fixed at 50/50 balance with no other settings. If you have an inverter tig welder with balance settings and frequency setttings, you can get away with much less amperage on 2mm thick pieces. With increasing EN percentage on the AC balance and higher frequency, you can probably do that with anywhere from 80-150A if you time the tack just right, meaning blink of any fast. Try it and with a little bit of practice you will be pleasantly surprised.
For your viewing pleasure
holy cow, yes, this is quite informative!rick9345 wrote: VERY INFORMATIVE
Thanks
I can only set the AC balance, from 40% EN to 80% EN, but for my practice I set it to "auto". The frequency is fixed (60Hz?).Oscar wrote:If you have an inverter tig welder with balance settings and frequency setttings, you can get away with much less amperage on 2mm thick pieces. With increasing EN percentage on the AC balance and higher frequency, you can probably do that with anywhere from 80-150A if you time the tack just right, meaning blink of any fast. Try it and with a little bit of practice you will be pleasantly surprised.
As far as I know, MIG doesn't have AC balance nor frequency controlRPat wrote:I'm trying to equate your settings to a Miller MIG and having difficulty. I've noticed that TIG was mentioned in this article. Were your samples ONLY done using TIG? I may be asking a dumb question but being a newbie, that's goes with that territory.
The forum heading is...RPat wrote:I'm trying to equate your settings to a Miller MIG and having difficulty. I've noticed that TIG was mentioned in this article. Were your samples ONLY done using TIG? I may be asking a dumb question but being a newbie, that's goes with that territory.
Return to “Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding”