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A Guide to Aluminum Welding A Guide to Aluminum Welding Reprinted courtesy of Welding Design and Fabrication magazine.
Follow the rules of thumb offered
here for selecting welding equipment, preparing base
materials, applying proper technique, and visually
inspecting weldments to ensure high-quality gas-metal-and
gas tungsten-arc welds on aluminum alloys. To overcome these challenges, operators need to follow the rules of thumb and equipment-selection guidelines offered here... Gas-metal-arc-welding: Preheating: Preheating the aluminum workpiece can help avoid weld cracking. Preheating temperature should not exceed 230 F-use a temperature indicator to prevent overheating. In addition, placing tack welds at the beginning and end of the area to be welded will aid in the preheating effort. Welders should also preheat a thick piece of aluminum when welding it to a thin piece; if cold lapping occurs, try using run-on and run-off tabs. The push technique: With aluminum, pushing the gun away from the weld puddle rather than pulling it will result in better cleaning action, reduced weld contamination, and improved shielding-gas coverage. Travel speed: Aluminum welding needs to be performed "hot and fast." Unlike steel, the high thermal conductivity of aluminum dictates use of hotter amperage and voltage settings and higher weld-travel speeds. If travel speed is too slow, the welder risks excessive burnthrough, particularly on thin-gage aluminum sheet. Shielding Gas: Argon, due to its good cleaning action and penetration profile, is the most common shielding gas used when welding aluminum. Welding 5XXX-series aluminum alloys, a shielding-gas mixture combining argon with helium - 75 percent helium maximum - will minimize the formation of magnesium oxide. Welding wire: Select an aluminum filler wire that has a melting temperature similar to the base material. The more the operator can narrow-down the melting range of the metal, the easier it will be to weld the alloy. Obtain wire that is 3/64- or 1/16- inch diameter. The larger the wire diameter, the easier it feeds. To weld thin-gage material, an 0.035-inch diameter wire combined with a pulsed-welding procedure at a low wire-feed speed - 100 to 300 in./min - works well. Convex-shaped welds: In aluminum welding, crater cracking causes most failures. Cracking results from the high rate of thermal expansion of aluminum and the considerable contractions that occur as welds cool. The risk of cracking is greatest with concave craters, since the surface of the crater contracts and tears as it cools. Therefore, welders should build-up craters to form a convex or mound shape. As the weld cools, the convex shape of the crater will compensate for contraction forces. Power-source selection: When
selecting a power source for GMAW of aluminum, first
consider the method of transfer -spray-arc or pulse.
Wire feeder: The preferred
method for feeding soft aluminum wire long distances
is the push-pull method, which employs an enclosed
wire-feed cabinet to protect the wire from the environment.
A constant-torque variable-speed motor in the wire-feed
cabinet helps push and guide the wire through the
gun at a constant force and speed. A high-torque motor
in the welding gun pulls the wire through and keeps
wire-feed speed and arc length consistent. Welding guns: Use a separate
gun liner for welding aluminum. To prevent wire chaffing,
try to restrain both ends of the liner to eliminate
gaps between the liner and the gas diffuser on the
gun.
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©1999-2008 The Lincoln Electric Company. |
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