Heat sink for stainless pipe
Posted: Sat May 25, 2013 1:56 pm
I performed an experiment with stainless pipe (sch 80):
Problem: Stainless pipe can get too hot which leads too poor weld quality
I attempted to provide a heat sink by wrapping braided copper wire around the pipe , on each side of weld. I wrapped the copper wire around the pipe twice, with the copper positioned 1 1/2" from each side of the weld. The copper wire was from a 2/0 welding lead (insulation stripped off).
What made me think of this? Well, when welding stainless plate, copper bar stock can be clamped next to the weld in order to provide a heat sink--Jody does this in one of his videos and I was taught to do this in welding school. So I reasoned that this would also work with stainless pipe. But it didn't, the weld zone was actually 115F hotter with the copper vs without copper.
Methods:
I used an infrared heat thermometer to record the starting and ending temperatures. Each start temp was the same (90F). The pipe was in a turntable which rotated the pipe (horizontally) at about 1 revolution/min. I used a stop watch and heated the pipe with a TIG torch at 100 amps for 4 min. I did not add filler wire, just heated the pipe. Each test was identical except for the copper wraps (one with copper and one without copper).
Results:
With copper wraps: the start temp was 90F--end temp was 355F
Without copper wraps: the start temp was 90F--end temp was 240F
Can anyone explain these results? I expected the opposite results.
Problem: Stainless pipe can get too hot which leads too poor weld quality
I attempted to provide a heat sink by wrapping braided copper wire around the pipe , on each side of weld. I wrapped the copper wire around the pipe twice, with the copper positioned 1 1/2" from each side of the weld. The copper wire was from a 2/0 welding lead (insulation stripped off).
What made me think of this? Well, when welding stainless plate, copper bar stock can be clamped next to the weld in order to provide a heat sink--Jody does this in one of his videos and I was taught to do this in welding school. So I reasoned that this would also work with stainless pipe. But it didn't, the weld zone was actually 115F hotter with the copper vs without copper.
Methods:
I used an infrared heat thermometer to record the starting and ending temperatures. Each start temp was the same (90F). The pipe was in a turntable which rotated the pipe (horizontally) at about 1 revolution/min. I used a stop watch and heated the pipe with a TIG torch at 100 amps for 4 min. I did not add filler wire, just heated the pipe. Each test was identical except for the copper wraps (one with copper and one without copper).
Results:
With copper wraps: the start temp was 90F--end temp was 355F
Without copper wraps: the start temp was 90F--end temp was 240F
Can anyone explain these results? I expected the opposite results.