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90 degree miter butt welds in round tubing
Posted: Sun Dec 07, 2014 11:24 am
by doneinone
For practice I have been welding 2 inch .035 6061 round tubing with ninety degree miter butt welds. I have had surprisingly good luck but was wondering if there were a preferred method to weld the outside corner portion of the joint. Also I noticed very little info on this type of weld when I googled it. How is it structurally? Thanks
Re: 90 degree miter butt welds in round tubing
Posted: Sun Dec 07, 2014 2:12 pm
by jwright650
My guess...if welded correctly, IMHO, the outside corner would be the strongest part of the joint as it would be mostlikely a full penetration weld if it melted all the way to the inside....regardless it is a groove weld vs a fillet weld if I'm picturing your joint correctly.
Re: 90 degree miter butt welds in round tubing
Posted: Mon Dec 08, 2014 12:24 am
by doneinone
- Miter Joint.jpg (3.75 KiB) Viewed 1196 times
Thanks for your input. The attached image is what I was talking about. On my welds the bead protrudes on the outside corner and that is why I was wondering if there were a particular method for this weld. In this image the outside weld looks flush with the outside edges of the tubing, much better looking than mine.
Re: 90 degree miter butt welds in round tubing
Posted: Mon Dec 08, 2014 4:37 am
by jcw
Perfect fit up. Likely a fusion weld with little to no filler added. Correct amps and penetration.
I remember Jody has a nice video about outside corner welds on some thin material.
Re: 90 degree miter butt welds in round tubing
Posted: Mon Dec 08, 2014 9:41 am
by Rick_H
Structural strength on that joint depends on where the load is coming from. With Alum you always will use a little filler, with that thin full penetration is easily achieved.
Re: 90 degree miter butt welds in round tubing
Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2014 8:41 am
by jwright650
doneinone wrote:Miter Joint.jpg
The attached image is what I was talking about.
Nice welded joint in that pic. After I posted, I thought about it more and I see what you mean...but like stated already with that thickness it should not be a problem.