stragenmitsuko
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2016
- Messages
- 327
- Reaction score
- 143
Yesterday I was welding an axle for a trailer , to make a tow dolly .
As it's something that goes on the road it has to be decently welded and reliable .
So I took out the TIG to make the first pass .
Basicly it's a tube pressed into another tube . The weld is a lap weld .
Diameter of the tube is 68 on the outside , wall thickness is 4mm , ordinary carbon steel .
That would be 3"-ish and 1/8 wall thickness .
To avoid distortion , I weld around the axle tube in half quadrants , turning the axle 180° after each half
quadrant to avoid thermal distortion .
The first side went like a charm , a decent nice looking weld bead with good penetration .
I started on the opposite side , first half quadrants went ok .
Turned the axle , did the opposite side , and all of a sudden it happend .
Puddle started to foam , arc became unstable , flame if you'de call it that , took on an orange appearance , the sound of the arc also changed .
After cooling down the weld looked like a sponge with more holes then welded material .
Thing is , nothing had changed .
Same tig , same settings , same shielding gas , same filler rod and thesame hand holding the torch .
I ground the ****** weld away , switched to the mig/mag and got exactly thesame result .
A very bad useless weld filled with porosities .
Anyone ever experianced this ?
The causes for porosities are usually dirt in the puddle or poor gas shielding .
And when I do welding on a car body this occurs from time to time , I guess sheetmetal from car bodies isn't the best in the world .
Never seen it happen with a tig weld on construction tubes though .
As it's something that goes on the road it has to be decently welded and reliable .
So I took out the TIG to make the first pass .
Basicly it's a tube pressed into another tube . The weld is a lap weld .
Diameter of the tube is 68 on the outside , wall thickness is 4mm , ordinary carbon steel .
That would be 3"-ish and 1/8 wall thickness .
To avoid distortion , I weld around the axle tube in half quadrants , turning the axle 180° after each half
quadrant to avoid thermal distortion .
The first side went like a charm , a decent nice looking weld bead with good penetration .
I started on the opposite side , first half quadrants went ok .
Turned the axle , did the opposite side , and all of a sudden it happend .
Puddle started to foam , arc became unstable , flame if you'de call it that , took on an orange appearance , the sound of the arc also changed .
After cooling down the weld looked like a sponge with more holes then welded material .
Thing is , nothing had changed .
Same tig , same settings , same shielding gas , same filler rod and thesame hand holding the torch .
I ground the ****** weld away , switched to the mig/mag and got exactly thesame result .
A very bad useless weld filled with porosities .
Anyone ever experianced this ?
The causes for porosities are usually dirt in the puddle or poor gas shielding .
And when I do welding on a car body this occurs from time to time , I guess sheetmetal from car bodies isn't the best in the world .
Never seen it happen with a tig weld on construction tubes though .
Last edited: