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#1
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Ok, I have been on a kick lately honing up my welding skills and I am accelerating pretty quickly with my stick skills. Luckily I get to practice at work for about 12 hours a week now. Stick welding is getting fun but I wanna try my hand at 4130 and was curious if people in our community prefer TIG welding or Gas welding the stuff. I assume Ernie gas welds his gear based on the bead, but could be wrong...anyone know?
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#2
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Nope all done with a Tig.
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"You can try to educate the ignorant but, you can't argue with stupid" Mike Boyette Recreational Pilot Gyroplane Sunstate Wing & Rotor Board Member Pra Member #46553 |
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#3
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Well I would be remissed if I didn't ask what kinda set up is used to properly TIG 4130? For instance what kinda electrode, filler, settings, etc work best.... I missed Jakes demo at 08 bensen days and was kinds pissed I missed it.
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#4
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I am not sure. I will ask dad next time I talk to him. He only welds if he has to. Kosaka does most of the welding including your machine.
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"You can try to educate the ignorant but, you can't argue with stupid" Mike Boyette Recreational Pilot Gyroplane Sunstate Wing & Rotor Board Member Pra Member #46553 |
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#5
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Ive used all three; Gas Tig Mig -- some will argue but with my Miller aircraft welder I prefer Mig--
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Mad MAn MIke my old website -- has been shut down- but my current E-Mail address is mls211@qwest.net Yea -Im a hard a$$ and probably an SOB- But I call them like I see them-- I am what I am --it dont pay anything but the hours are good and there is no heavy lifting-- |
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#6
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TIG is my welding method of choice, has been for years. A friend decided he didn't want to spend the money on a TIG rig when he started construction on a Littlewing and went with gas. After trying that for a short while he ended up buying the same TIG welder I have and hasn't looked back since.
Although it's not my main welder, I do have one of the little Harbor Freight inverter TIG machines that when it's on sale sells for around $200, and if modified with a foot controller for amperage control is capable of doing aircraft quality welds. It might make an acceptable low cost alternative for someone wanting to build a gyrocopter like a Dominator, one day I may get around to posting a review on it. . Last edited by Alan_Cheatham; 04-28-2009 at 06:08 PM. |
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#7
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I have used all four methods and like Alan, I prefer TIG because there is no weld splatter, less warp of material and better control of the bead, especially with thin 4130 sections. Of course, it is the only good way to weld AL.
For thicker walls I like MIG with flux-core wire, stick is okay for heavy sections and I never liked welding with acetylene torch.
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PRA#41675 |
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#8
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I have all my work done with a TIG as well. Very clean welds and I can trust them as far as strength goes.
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You have a much better view when you live life on the edge. http://youtube.com/watch?v=8P-sAbVNde4 |
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#9
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I use gas and TIG. I like gas for thin wall tubes.
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#10
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Thanks all for your replies, I have just started to Tig weld and I am enjoying the control you have while running a bead. I have also experimented with Si/Br filler rod and made some really nice looking joints. How does brazing compare with welding overall?
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Lee Scattergood Satellite Beach, FL |
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#11
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To the guys with TIG welding 4130 experience,
What kinda starting settings would you use for say 5/8" tubing with a .035 wall. Gas flow?, electrode?, filler?, cup size?... lemme know. Last edited by MrGrey; 04-29-2009 at 05:51 AM. |
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#12
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I posted this last week.....Welding tips and tricks. Book mark it.
This guy is good, check out the razor blades, and soda cans welded together.
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The government cannot give anything to anybody that the Government does not first take from somebody else. “I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery.” - Thomas Jefferson Scott Essex....Flying H Ranch |
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#13
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Quote:
I myself use a water cooled 20 size torch with rubber hoses, mainly for the flexibility as the power cable is much smaller than an air cooled torch, a gas lens with a cup size that will allow proper access to the joint be that flat or a cluster, flow around 12 to 15 cfh depending on the amount of electrode stick-out necessary to get to the joint. I prefer 1.5% Lanthanated electrodes sized according to the amount of current necessary to weld the joint be that a low mass "T" or high mass cluster, but usually 1/16". For filler rod on 4130 I use ER80S-D2, typically spooled .045" MIG wire as I have converted an old sewing machine into a wire feeder. ER70S-6 is also acceptable and more readily available locally, especially in MIG wire and good for practicing. Note that if you do research about what process and filler rod to use for aircraft welding 4130 you will never come up with a consensus of opinion as everyone has their own ideas as to what is best. These are the choices I have made based on many hours of research and personal welding experience. |
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#14
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All I know is tube and fabric airplanes were gas welded untill the monocoupe aluminum riveted frames came into vogue. It seems to me that MIG and TIG welds would leave any joint in stress as they do not heat up much of the weld area. All of my MIG welding has resulted in very weak joints that usually break. And I finally bit the bullet and spent a grand on a good MIller MIG unit. The welds can be pretty but they don't penetrate well. May be just my welding skills. I am pretty confident on my gas welds and that is the only thing I would do on a 4130 tube frame. Also from experience I can tell you forget the cheap walmart or harbor freight MIG or TIG stuff. If you are going to do it buy the best Miller or Lincoln equipment suficient to handle the thickness you are going to weld. The more I study it seem TIG is perferred over MIG just for the pentration issue but I would be worried about the stress left in the joint. RACER might not agree but if I were TIG welding I would use a torch to bring the whole joint up to at least a dull red and let it cool slowly in still air. The same as you are supposed to do with gas welding a joint.
Last edited by giro5; 04-29-2009 at 06:10 PM. |
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#15
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One interesting book I bought recently was "WELDER'S HANDBOOK" A guide to Plasma cutting, Oxyacetyulene, Arc, Mig and Tig welding. By Richard Finch, SAE,AWS
It really just talks about the differences and pro's and con's of the various techniques. I think I bought it from LOWES hardware from about $20 bucks. "Aircraft Welding" by L.S. Elzea circa 1942 from Lindsay Publications Inc. Is far and away the bible on gas welding aircraft 4130 tubing. I have bought a couple of videos from the EAA and the "Tinman" on gas welding and they don't have some of the techniques explained in the Elzea book. Like the direction you run the bead around the weld is important. Run it against the metal grain and the joint is more prone to fail at the edge of the weld. Last edited by giro5; 04-29-2009 at 06:10 PM. |
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