Hello guys, was looking to see if there was a video
of aluminum spool gun welding and how to help the cratering at the end!
I'm new to welding and have a miller 211 with spool gun
The welds are getting much better except for that!
Thanks
Comments & questions on new & past videos
- Otto Nobedder
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Joined:Thu Jan 06, 2011 11:40 pm
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Location:Near New Orleans
The technique is often called "buttoning off", and applies to steel MIG as well, as the shallow puddle in a simple tail-off is a weak point in any weld.Fishbum wrote:Hello guys, was looking to see if there was a video
of aluminum spool gun welding and how to help the cratering at the end!
I'm new to welding and have a miller 211 with spool gun
The welds are getting much better except for that!
Thanks
The short form is to release the trigger while holding the gun in the same location and watch the puddle cool. About the moment the color gets hard to see (fixed lens hood) or fades to dull red/brown (AD hood), hit the trigger again for a half-second or so, and fill that crater as it forms. For a larger aluminum weld on a heavy section, you may need to to this twice.
Steve S
- TRACKRANGER
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Weldmonger
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Joined:Wed Aug 06, 2014 12:48 am
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Location:Melbourne, Australia
Some MIG welders have a crater fill option so that when the trigger is released, the weld current 'ramps' down and continues to feed wire at a reduced rate to fill the crater as it forms.
On mine (an EWM Phoenix 355 Concept pulse), the Slope Duration, Wire Speed, Arc Length correction and End Time are all programmable (as well as Post Gas Flow).
On mine (an EWM Phoenix 355 Concept pulse), the Slope Duration, Wire Speed, Arc Length correction and End Time are all programmable (as well as Post Gas Flow).
- 2014-09-22_17-35-15.jpg (13.91 KiB) Viewed 1481 times
EWM Phonenix 355 Pulse MIG set mainly for Aluminum, CIGWeld 300Amp AC/DC TIG, TRANSMIG S3C 300 Amp MIG, etc, etc
You are into really high end mig machines when you get into hot start, crater fill etc. At least in the USATRACKRANGER wrote:Some MIG welders have a crater fill option so that when the trigger is released, the weld current 'ramps' down and continues to feed wire at a reduced rate to fill the crater as it forms.
On mine (an EWM Phoenix 355 Concept pulse), the Slope Duration, Wire Speed, Arc Length correction and End Time are all programmable (as well as Post Gas Flow).
2014-09-22_17-35-15.jpg
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