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vernd
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I have seen a lot of race car related aluminum welds on thin material where the weld bead seems very wide or large , however burn through on the back side is non existent. Specifically on pit pal products ( utility trays and the like from 16 gage). How do they accomplish this. I would normally use wire size same as material thickness ( 1/16 in this case) Do you think a larger filler wire would give this effect?
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You'll probably need a backing plate. Stainless or copper. If you have an inverter welder then triangle mode is designed for welding thin aluminum. Clamp it down good or its will bow up on you. You might wanna try pulsing with the peddle too.
Raymond
Everlast PowerTIG 255EXT
BigD
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If you can, turning the frequency down helps too. Here's a pic of when I was goofing around with frequency. The narrow bead is 200 or 400 I forget now, the wide is like 40.
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Wide bead width with little backside fusion can be a result of AC frequency and/or EP/EN percentage.
  • AC Frequency
    • Lower = Wider bead with less penetration
    • Higher = Narrower bead with increased penetration
  • AC Balance (with respect to bead width)
    • Higher EN% = increased penetration with a slight side-effect of narrower bead
    • Lower EN% = less penetration with a slight side-effect of wider bead.
The following are courtesy of the Miller GTAW Handbooks:

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Sandow
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Great info Oscar. The only thing I'd add is that tip shape has a dramatic impact on melt pool width as well. A sharp point will produce a shallower and wider pool then a ball or blunt point. I agree with a backing plate being the way to go but a perfect set up requires pretty much all of this stuff to be at least considered.

-Sandow
Red-hot iron, white-hot iron, cold-black iron; an iron taste, an iron smell, and a babel of iron sounds.
-Charles Dickens
ajlskater1
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You can accomplish that appearance if you pulse foot pedal as you dip and back off quickly after or use pulse function on the machine but I prefer to manually do it, I get better timing being in control vs a machine telling you when to dip.
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Sandow wrote:Great info Oscar. The only thing I'd add is that tip shape has a dramatic impact on melt pool width as well. A sharp point will produce a shallower and wider pool then a ball or blunt point. I agree with a backing plate being the way to go but a perfect set up requires pretty much all of this stuff to be at least considered.

-Sandow
Ask and you shall receive...

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Last edited by Oscar on Fri Jul 08, 2016 10:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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