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#1
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Re: Welding Right Angles
It's an interesting topic really.
The more experienced the welder I'm talking to, the more they advocate to me that welding without post welding machining is NOT the best way to do things if you really, really want precision. Precision is really the key. If you can design such that the warp and such doesn't cause an issue, you're golden. If not, be prepared to take a lot more effort during & after welding to straighten, tweak, thwack, etc. your frame into tolerance. |
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#2
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Re: Welding Right Angles
We haven't seen any warping problems in our welded chassis this year. Of course, we cheated by using steel....it's cheap, easily welded by a freshman with little experience and no formal training, and it keeps the bottom of our wide base robot heavy enough that it shouldn't tip over too many times in competition. We also designed it so that it doesn't really have anything critical as far as being in the right place, so even if it did warp some, it doesn't matter.
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#3
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Re: Welding Right Angles
If you're welding aluminum it helps to preheat and use strong jigs.
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#4
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Re: Welding Right Angles
for TIG, a trick I was taught once was to put the (pointed) end of the tunsten rod (make sure it is the "green" kind, not orange or red) about .25" INSIDE the porcelain gas shield...
also, for TIG, make sure you are set to AC, not DC if you are welding AL. For any metal or welding type, be sure to use a wire brush to get the weld areas as oxide-free as possible... having an angle die grinder/drill with a wire brush makes this a lot easier. Last, for TIG, this is kinda a basic thing, but make sure that you use the correct filler rod. for butt and inner angle joints, the thickness should match the thinner of the two edges being welded. for lap and outer angle joints, no filler rod is (generally) needed; sometimes it helps to "cheat" and use a bit of filler rod to get the puddle started. |
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#5
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Re: Welding Right Angles
Quote:
FWIW I prefer thoriated tungsten (Red, also radioactive! avoid unless you have vented grinding equipment!), lanthanated tungsten (orange), or zirconated tungsten (silver), over pure tungsten (green) for welding aluminum. Pure tungsten is a bit old-school and definitely not the best way to do it IMO as someone who earned an AWS welding certification in Al TIG. Wire brushes, particularly non-stainless steel brushes, have a very nasty habit of making aluminum and other non-ferrous metals very dirty if used in weld prep. One must also ensure that stainless steel brushes are designated for one material only, i.e. aluminum, steel, or titanium, and that they are not used on a different material. I have always preferred abrasive sanding discs for aluminum weld prep because they don't contaminate the base metal, even if they're used on a different material. Though AC welding current (for AL) will break through the oxide layer as it is, and a break-arc technique will clean out even the toughest oxide deposits like anodized surfaces. Just be sure a good degreaser is used BEFORE and AFTER any brushing or abrasive prep. In thinner sheet metal you could probably get away with just making a fuse joint for lap and outside corner welds. However, you run the risk of under-cutting the base material and causing a weak joint and some nasty stress risers. I would be very careful about specifying the right weld bead for each joint knowing that fuse joints are prone to under-cutting. |
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#6
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Re: Welding Right Angles
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side note- thorium is not very radioactive... the high school shop where I learned to TIG didn't have vented grinders and we used red rods all the time... hopefully that won't cause problems down the road Quote:
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#7
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Re: Welding Right Angles
Quote:
Quote:
![]() The ground point on an red/orange/silver electrode control the arc better than the balled end on a pure tungsten electrode, and they can handle more heat/current. |
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#8
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Re: Welding Right Angles
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from what I have read green electrodes work well for AC AL TIG... FWIW, green rods are lower cost as well... |
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