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Science Forum Index » Engineering - Joining (Welding) Forum » TIG welding aluminum...
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| Jon Danniken... |
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 9:09 pm |
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Guest
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Howdy,
The design of my footpedal current-controlled DC TIG welder is coming along
smoothly, but it has brought me to a crossroads.
It has come to my attention that welding aluminum with DC is best to be
avoided (I am guessing due to the need to get through the oxide layer), and
so far I am only designing a provision for foot control of DC current (the
current control is via a thyristor bridge after the AC transformer).
Here's my question: this project will have a (low current) HF/HV arc
starting module. If I leave this on while welding with DC, will that,
superimposed on top of the DC current, be of any significant help with
welding aluminum?
Thanks for any insight into this issue,
Jon |
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| Mechanical Magic... |
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 9:09 pm |
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Jon,
For ultra thin materials, DC/HF may work, reverse polarity IIRC.
But for sheet metal on up, nope.
There is a VERY significant swirl on the puddle caused by the AC, that
moves crap to the edge. On many settings, it is almost invisible,
depending on the machine.
Dave
On May 4, 7:09 pm, "Jon Danniken" <jonREMOVETHISdanni... at (no spam) yahoo.com>
wrote:
Quote: Howdy,
The design of my footpedal current-controlled DC TIG welder is coming along
smoothly, but it has brought me to a crossroads.
It has come to my attention that welding aluminum with DC is best to be
avoided (I am guessing due to the need to get through the oxide layer), and
so far I am only designing a provision for foot control of DC current (the
current control is via a thyristor bridge after the AC transformer).
Here's my question: this project will have a (low current) HF/HV arc
starting module. If I leave this on while welding with DC, will that,
superimposed on top of the DC current, be of any significant help with
welding aluminum?
Thanks for any insight into this issue,
Jon |
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| Ignoramus11115... |
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 11:01 pm |
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Guest
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On 2008-05-05, Jon Danniken <jonREMOVETHISdanniken at (no spam) yahoo.com> wrote:
Quote: Howdy,
The design of my footpedal current-controlled DC TIG welder is coming along
smoothly, but it has brought me to a crossroads.
It has come to my attention that welding aluminum with DC is best to be
avoided (I am guessing due to the need to get through the oxide layer), and
so far I am only designing a provision for foot control of DC current (the
current control is via a thyristor bridge after the AC transformer).
Here's my question: this project will have a (low current) HF/HV arc
starting module. If I leave this on while welding with DC, will that,
superimposed on top of the DC current, be of any significant help with
welding aluminum?
No. The point of AC is that the reverse polarity cleans the aluminum
oxide layer, thus achieving a good bond. HF would not help with it.
--
Due to extreme spam originating from Google Groups, and their inattention
to spammers, I and many others block all articles originating
from Google Groups. If you want your postings to be seen by
more readers you will need to find a different means of
posting on Usenet.
http://improve-usenet.org/ |
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| Jon Danniken... |
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 11:04 pm |
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"Mechanical Magic" wrote:
Quote:
Jon,
For ultra thin materials, DC/HF may work, reverse polarity IIRC.
But for sheet metal on up, nope.
There is a VERY significant swirl on the puddle caused by the AC, that
moves crap to the edge. On many settings, it is almost invisible,
depending on the machine.
Thanks, Dave, I appreciate that. Didn't know that about the puddle, either,
so I'll watch for that.
Alrighty then, so a squarewave would be the easiest waveform to make, would
that be a sufficient enough selection of waveforms, and what frequency range
would be most useful?
Jon |
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| Ignoramus11115... |
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 11:12 pm |
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On 2008-05-05, Jon Danniken <jonREMOVETHISdanniken at (no spam) yahoo.com> wrote:
Quote: "Mechanical Magic" wrote:
Jon,
For ultra thin materials, DC/HF may work, reverse polarity IIRC.
But for sheet metal on up, nope.
There is a VERY significant swirl on the puddle caused by the AC, that
moves crap to the edge. On many settings, it is almost invisible,
depending on the machine.
Thanks, Dave, I appreciate that. Didn't know that about the puddle, either,
so I'll watch for that.
Alrighty then, so a squarewave would be the easiest waveform to make, would
that be a sufficient enough selection of waveforms, and what frequency range
would be most useful?
I would say 20-200 Hz
--
Due to extreme spam originating from Google Groups, and their inattention
to spammers, I and many others block all articles originating
from Google Groups. If you want your postings to be seen by
more readers you will need to find a different means of
posting on Usenet.
http://improve-usenet.org/ |
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| ... |
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 11:13 pm |
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Guest
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On Sun, 4 May 2008 21:04:24 -0700, "Jon Danniken"
<jonREMOVETHISdanniken at (no spam) yahoo.com> wrote:
Quote: "Mechanical Magic" wrote:
Jon,
For ultra thin materials, DC/HF may work, reverse polarity IIRC.
But for sheet metal on up, nope.
There is a VERY significant swirl on the puddle caused by the AC, that
moves crap to the edge. On many settings, it is almost invisible,
depending on the machine.
Thanks, Dave, I appreciate that. Didn't know that about the puddle, either,
so I'll watch for that.
Alrighty then, so a squarewave would be the easiest waveform to make, would
that be a sufficient enough selection of waveforms, and what frequency range
would be most useful?
Jon
Square wave AC with variable duty cycle is best. More negative cleans
better, more positive penetrates better, from what I remember. Almost
needs to be an inverter unit to do this.
** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** |
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| Jon Danniken... |
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 11:31 pm |
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clare at snyder dot ontario dot canada> wrote:
Quote: On Sun, 4 May 2008 21:04:24 -0700, "Jon Danniken" wrote
Alrighty then, so a squarewave would be the easiest waveform to make,
would
that be a sufficient enough selection of waveforms, and what frequency
range
would be most useful?
Jon
Square wave AC with variable duty cycle is best. More negative cleans
better, more positive penetrates better, from what I remember.
Thanks, Clare, I appreciate it. A duty cycle control shouldn't be too hard
to put in there, if I'm feeding them anyway.
Brings up another issue though, I'm guessing the waveform will need to swing
from positive to negative, and not just dance around above the work
potential. Hmmm, I'll have to think about that one.
Jon |
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| Jon Danniken... |
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 11:32 pm |
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"Ignoramus11115":> Jon Danniken wrote:
Quote:
Here's my question: this project will have a (low current) HF/HV arc
starting module. If I leave this on while welding with DC, will that,
superimposed on top of the DC current, be of any significant help with
welding aluminum?
No. The point of AC is that the reverse polarity cleans the aluminum
oxide layer, thus achieving a good bond. HF would not help with it.
Thanks, Iggy, I appreciate it.
Jon |
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| Jon Danniken... |
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 11:34 pm |
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"Ignoramus11115" wrote:
Quote: Jon Danniken wrote:
Alrighty then, so a squarewave would be the easiest waveform to make,
would
that be a sufficient enough selection of waveforms, and what frequency
range
would be most useful?
I would say 20-200 Hz
Thanks for that, Iggy. That's a nice approachable range. I'm smelling a
555 chip in this thing.
Jon |
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Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 11:07 am |
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Guest
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On Sun, 4 May 2008 21:32:30 -0700, "Jon Danniken"
<jonREMOVETHISdanniken at (no spam) yahoo.com> wrote:
Quote: "Ignoramus11115":> Jon Danniken wrote:
Here's my question: this project will have a (low current) HF/HV arc
starting module. If I leave this on while welding with DC, will that,
superimposed on top of the DC current, be of any significant help with
welding aluminum?
No. The point of AC is that the reverse polarity cleans the aluminum
oxide layer, thus achieving a good bond. HF would not help with it.
Thanks, Iggy, I appreciate it.
Jon
Greetings Jon,
Years ago I was taught how to weld aluminum with DC tig. The material
was .25 wall thickness 6061 channel. I had to clean the aluminum with
a cleaner that had hydrofluoric acid in it. Anyway, the parts were
milled first with a 45 degeree angle on each edge about 2/3 of the
material thickness. The resulting groove at the butt joint was then
about 5/16 wide. I used helium, not argon, because helium welds
hotter. I filled the groove in one pass using 1/8 rod with the welder
in the 125-300 amp range. Lots of black residue was left on the weld
but since the tops of the weld were ground off this didn't matter. Ac
is really much better and the cleaning action is remarkable.
ERS |
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| Gunner Asch... |
Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 11:34 am |
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On Sun, 4 May 2008 21:32:30 -0700, "Jon Danniken"
<jonREMOVETHISdanniken at (no spam) yahoo.com> wrote:
Quote: "Ignoramus11115":> Jon Danniken wrote:
Here's my question: this project will have a (low current) HF/HV arc
starting module. If I leave this on while welding with DC, will that,
superimposed on top of the DC current, be of any significant help with
welding aluminum?
No. The point of AC is that the reverse polarity cleans the aluminum
oxide layer, thus achieving a good bond. HF would not help with it.
Thanks, Iggy, I appreciate it.
Jon
Most full function tig welders have this AC as an ajustable
feature...more bias one one for cleaning, the other way for more
penetration.
Personally I use more penetration by about 60/40 over cleaning most fo
the time, at about 60 hz, though I do have the option of going from
1pps to about 300.
Many plain tig welders get by just fine at 60 hz
Gunner, Dauber at Large.
Political Correctness is a doctrine fostered by a delusional,
illogical liberal minority, and rabidly promoted by an
unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the
proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end. |
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| Randal O'Brian... |
Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 12:19 pm |
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Guest
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"Jon Danniken" <jonREMOVETHISdanniken at (no spam) yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:687gtmF2rme3tU1 at (no spam) mid.individual.net...
Quote: clare at snyder dot ontario dot canada> wrote:
On Sun, 4 May 2008 21:04:24 -0700, "Jon Danniken" wrote
Alrighty then, so a squarewave would be the easiest waveform to make,
would
that be a sufficient enough selection of waveforms, and what frequency
range
would be most useful?
Jon
Square wave AC with variable duty cycle is best. More negative cleans
better, more positive penetrates better, from what I remember.
Thanks, Clare, I appreciate it. A duty cycle control shouldn't be too
hard to put in there, if I'm feeding them anyway.
Brings up another issue though, I'm guessing the waveform will need to
swing from positive to negative, and not just dance around above the work
potential. Hmmm, I'll have to think about that one.
Jon
The commercial inverter welders I 've seen use a transistor H bridge between
the DC output and the work piece to get the AC output. The technology is
the same as a VFD but single-phase only. A microprocessor would seem to
make it fairly easy to vary both freq. and pulse width as needed.
Randal |
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Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 1:18 pm |
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On May 5, 12:31 am, "Jon Danniken" <jonREMOVETHISdanni... at (no spam) yahoo.com>
wrote:
Quote: clare at snyder dot ontario dot canada> wrote:
On Sun, 4 May 2008 21:04:24 -0700, "Jon Danniken" wrote
Alrighty then, so a squarewave would be the easiest waveform to make,
would
that be a sufficient enough selection of waveforms, and what frequency
range
would be most useful?
Jon
Square wave AC with variable duty cycle is best. More negative cleans
better, more positive penetrates better, from what I remember.
Thanks, Clare, I appreciate it. A duty cycle control shouldn't be too hard
to put in there, if I'm feeding them anyway.
Brings up another issue though, I'm guessing the waveform will need to swing
from positive to negative, and not just dance around above the work
potential. Hmmm, I'll have to think about that one.
Jon
Could you get the best of both worlds if the bias was changed back and
forth at a few hertz?
Spend a portion of a second 'more negative' then 'more positive' etc
etc.
Dave |
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| Jon Danniken... |
Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 4:53 pm |
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"Randal O'Brian" wrote:
Quote: "Jon Danniken" wrote:
Thanks, Clare, I appreciate it. A duty cycle control shouldn't be too
hard to put in there, if I'm feeding them anyway.
Brings up another issue though, I'm guessing the waveform will need to
swing from positive to negative, and not just dance around above the work
potential. Hmmm, I'll have to think about that one.
Jon
The commercial inverter welders I 've seen use a transistor H bridge
between the DC output and the work piece to get the AC output. The
technology is the same as a VFD but single-phase only. A microprocessor
would seem to make it fairly easy to vary both freq. and pulse width as
needed.
Thanks, Randall, I appreciate that. When I was looking at inverters the
other night (from Clare's suggestion), I was contemplating a two-mosfet
jobby, such as this:
http://engr.nmsu.edu/~etti/spring97/electronics/cmos/IMG00006.GIF
Since I haven't built an inverter of any type before, what would be the
advantage of going with an H bridge?
Thanks,
Jon |
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| Jon Danniken... |
Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 4:55 pm |
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"Gunner Asch" wrote:
Quote: Most full function tig welders have this AC as an ajustable
feature...more bias one one for cleaning, the other way for more
penetration.
Personally I use more penetration by about 60/40 over cleaning most fo
the time, at about 60 hz, though I do have the option of going from
1pps to about 300.
Many plain tig welders get by just fine at 60 hz
Thanks, Gunner, I appreciate knowing your experience in this matter. BTW,
in your usage, do you tend to find having a foot control an important part
of TIGging aluminum?
Thanks,
Jon |
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