Tig welding tips, questions, equipment, applications, instructions, techniques, tig welding machines, troubleshooting tig welding process
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  • Joined:
    Sun Feb 02, 2014 6:14 pm
  • Location:
    Near Mt Airy

My mentor that has helped along my welding adventures said I would probably be well off to heat these casting to around 200 deg. F before lighting up on it. There is a plug that has to be welded into the opening...moved the intake port. You think the Dynasty 210 w/argon will deliver or do I need to get access to more amps? He has a machine that can go upwards of 300 amps AC. Maybe try and weld a scrap piece....puck is T-6 and head is prolly a356? Have not hardness tested head yet. Some welding was done before I was offered the job here. The puck just needs to stay in the port and not leak.
Attachments
the puck to close the port
the puck to close the port
0601161745.jpg (33.14 KiB) Viewed 497 times
Puck in place weld side
Puck in place weld side
0601161745a.jpg (46.54 KiB) Viewed 497 times
Building an airplane is at times somewhat like a divorce.....with the exception that she doesn't leave
J.J. Flash
Sandow
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  • Joined:
    Fri Mar 04, 2016 4:52 pm
  • Location:
    Central VA

I've managed welds on 1" aluminum with a 200 amp machine but it took enough preheat to do it that any contact with my glove puffed smoke... You can manage it but you need to be concerned about distortion far more than I did. Trying on scrap is a good start but hit it with some calipers before and after and see if a similar weld has warped it.

-Sandow
Red-hot iron, white-hot iron, cold-black iron; an iron taste, an iron smell, and a babel of iron sounds.
-Charles Dickens
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