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#21
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Mike,
Did the tip I let you borrow help? I am building a mount for my HF Mobile antenna mount and may need your help. Hope to see you at the USO Swing Dance Saturday and the Poker Run Sunday. If you can get in my 150, you can go with me on the Poker Run. Fly Safe, Larry :-) O/O N22027, K4LLQ mhorowit wrote: Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe wrote: But it sounds like, in spite of what your chart says, you need to use a smaller tip. Just be sure you are getting enough of a puddle on the sleeve as you turn down the heat. Someone in the office suggests if I go to a much smaller tip, then the area I'm heating will be smaller and therefore I may be introducing stresses closer to the work. Is that a consideration in the world of 4130? - Mike |
#22
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On 20 Jun 2006 11:10:41 -0700, "Larry" wrote:
Mike, Did the tip I let you borrow help? Oh - yes it helped; it told me that modern tips will fit on my old Smith handle - Mike |
#23
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"mhorowit" wrote in message
ups.com... Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe wrote: But it sounds like, in spite of what your chart says, you need to use a smaller tip. Just be sure you are getting enough of a puddle on the sleeve as you turn down the heat. Someone in the office suggests if I go to a much smaller tip, then the area I'm heating will be smaller and therefore I may be introducing stresses closer to the work. Is that a consideration in the world of 4130? - Mike That's news to me... -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
#24
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On Tue, 20 Jun 2006 16:58:51 -0400, "Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe" The Sea
Hawk at wow way d0t com wrote: "mhorowit" wrote in message oups.com... Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe wrote: But it sounds like, in spite of what your chart says, you need to use a smaller tip. Just be sure you are getting enough of a puddle on the sleeve as you turn down the heat. Someone in the office suggests if I go to a much smaller tip, then the area I'm heating will be smaller and therefore I may be introducing stresses closer to the work. Is that a consideration in the world of 4130? - Mike That's news to me... OK, I'll take that as a "forget about it" ![]() |
#25
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Many are balanced pressure so 5 psi and 5psi might do the job,
"Morgans" wrote in message ... "Ken Moffett" wrote 32psi? That sounds more like "cutting tip" O2 pressure, not welding. Yeah, you're right, it is. My mistake. Ever try to weld with a cutting tip? Not easy, but it can be done! g I wouldn't try to weld an airplane with a cutting torch, though. Quite frankly, I do so little gas welding, I just play with it, until I like it. I don't remember what I use. Does around 12 pounds sound about right? That's what seems to come to mind. Still, 2 pounds is not very much. I tend to use the knobs on the torch to control the flow, as the most important control. I would think that if you were using two pounds, you would have to have the knobs all of the way open. I would think it would be hard to keep a consistent flame, like that. -- Jim in NC |
#26
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I always set up for 5.0 - 5.5 psi on both the acetylene and oxygen,
regardless of tip size. "Cy Galley" wrote in message news:WlTqg.1060536$xm3.641273@attbi_s21... Many are balanced pressure so 5 psi and 5psi might do the job, "Morgans" wrote in message ... "Ken Moffett" wrote 32psi? That sounds more like "cutting tip" O2 pressure, not welding. Yeah, you're right, it is. My mistake. Ever try to weld with a cutting tip? Not easy, but it can be done! g I wouldn't try to weld an airplane with a cutting torch, though. Quite frankly, I do so little gas welding, I just play with it, until I like it. I don't remember what I use. Does around 12 pounds sound about right? That's what seems to come to mind. Still, 2 pounds is not very much. I tend to use the knobs on the torch to control the flow, as the most important control. I would think that if you were using two pounds, you would have to have the knobs all of the way open. I would think it would be hard to keep a consistent flame, like that. -- Jim in NC |
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