stragenmitsuko
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2016
- Messages
- 327
- Reaction score
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I guess I learned something new today .
I''m quite familiar with silver soldering , mostly brass fittings on red copper , or red copper to red copper .
Never had any problems with it . If the copper is clean enough I can even do it without flux .
So I'm retrofitting an airco to a vintage toyota MR2 Mk1 .
and I needed to solder ss parts to 1/2 copper , and to 1/2 stainless .
And to my surprise that didn't work as I expected .
So first thouht , I had the wrong kind of flux . I bought new one , specificly asked for stainless , and the result
was even worse . The solder wouldn't flow , wouldn't bind to the stainless .
Made such a mess I was ashamed of myself .
So what went wrong ?
To much heat , to fast .
Red copper is a very good heat conductor , so it's easy to heat it evenly and then apply the solder .
Basicly just blaze that oxy /acetetylene torch until it's hot enough and solder .
Only takes a couple of seconds really on thin walled 1/2 pipe .
Ss is a bad conductor , so what happend is with that acetylene torch I overheated the flux while
the metal wasn't up to temperature yet . I got local red hot spots on the stainless , while the opposite side
was still relatively cold . The flux turned into a black scale that had to be sand blasted to remove it .
Impossible to silver solder that .
So I turned down the heat on the torch , made a longer flame with less oxygen , and
allowed the stainless to reach the brazing temperature slowly .
Carefully watching the flux colour also helped .
As soon as it turnes kind of transparent it's hot enough , and then you just keep gently heating the ss
until the solder starts to flow .
Once I knew what I was doing wrong , it all worked out as I expected .
So as the saying goes , never to old to learn something new
I''m quite familiar with silver soldering , mostly brass fittings on red copper , or red copper to red copper .
Never had any problems with it . If the copper is clean enough I can even do it without flux .
So I'm retrofitting an airco to a vintage toyota MR2 Mk1 .
and I needed to solder ss parts to 1/2 copper , and to 1/2 stainless .
And to my surprise that didn't work as I expected .
So first thouht , I had the wrong kind of flux . I bought new one , specificly asked for stainless , and the result
was even worse . The solder wouldn't flow , wouldn't bind to the stainless .
Made such a mess I was ashamed of myself .
So what went wrong ?
To much heat , to fast .
Red copper is a very good heat conductor , so it's easy to heat it evenly and then apply the solder .
Basicly just blaze that oxy /acetetylene torch until it's hot enough and solder .
Only takes a couple of seconds really on thin walled 1/2 pipe .
Ss is a bad conductor , so what happend is with that acetylene torch I overheated the flux while
the metal wasn't up to temperature yet . I got local red hot spots on the stainless , while the opposite side
was still relatively cold . The flux turned into a black scale that had to be sand blasted to remove it .
Impossible to silver solder that .
So I turned down the heat on the torch , made a longer flame with less oxygen , and
allowed the stainless to reach the brazing temperature slowly .
Carefully watching the flux colour also helped .
As soon as it turnes kind of transparent it's hot enough , and then you just keep gently heating the ss
until the solder starts to flow .
Once I knew what I was doing wrong , it all worked out as I expected .
So as the saying goes , never to old to learn something new