14-07-2012, 05:00 PM
Welding
Welding.ppt (Size: 298 KB / Downloads: 523)
Competencies
Identify the different types Consumable and Nonconsumable electrode welding processes
Identify the flame characteristics associated with different types of gas welding
Identify the unique characteristics for each type of arc welding
List the advantages and disadvantages of gas and arc welding
Welding
Soldering and brazing are adhesive bonds, whereas welding is a cohesive bond.
Joint Preparation
Butt joints, vee joints, double-vee joints, tee joints, which require a fillet weld, and lap joints.
Butt joints are used on metal that has a thickness of one-quarter inch or less.
Preparation for Weld Joints
Surfaces to be joined must be ground to the weld specification.
Any slag, corrosion, or other foreign material must be removed.
GAS WELDING
Oxygen-Acetylene Welding
Oxygen tank (green)
Acetylene tank (red, or black with a red top)
Oxygen pressure valves have a right-hand internal thread
Acetylene pressure valve has an external left-hand thread.
An oxygen-acetylene flame is very hot, approaching 3500°F.
Fusion weld is to place the two pieces against each other and melt their surfaces together.
Reducing flame is used to melt low-melting-point metals and alloys because it does not oxidize or corrode the metals.
Neutral flame is the hottest one possible and is the proper adjustment for welding.
Oxidizing flame that can cause corrosion in the metal. It is only used for cutting flames or burning pieces of metal from a piece of stock. (Fig 14-9)
Advantages of an oxy-acetylene weld
inexpensive
requires very little specialized equipment.
Disadvantages
any traces of carbon left in the weld will weaken it.
Oxygen-Hydrogen Welding
The oxygen-hydrogen torch can reach temperatures much higher than the oxy-acetylene torch.
More expensive than oxy-acetylene welding and involves the flammability risk with hydrogen.
Plasma Welding
Hydrogen plasma burns even hotter than hydrogen gas, permitting the welding of extremely high-melting-point metals.
Very clean procedure that results in very little slag or foreign matter in the weld.
ELECTRICAL WELDING
Resistance Welding – The two parts are pressed together and an alternating current (A/C) is passed through the contact zone.
Spot welding – used extensively on sheet metals (holds handles on pots, car body together)
Ribbon welding rollers. - parts to be welded are drawn between electrodes rollers while electricity is applied.
Arc Welding
A sustained arc generates the heat for melting the work piece and filler material.
Consumable electrodes
Non-consumable electrodes
Consumable electrodes
Flux Core Arc Welding (FCAW) developed in the early 1950s as an adaptation to SMAW to overcome limitation imposed by the use of a stick electrodes. Uses a spool of filler wire fed through the hand-piece. A core of flux is inside the wire
Two versions
Self-shielded flux-cored arc welding – includes not only fluxes but also ingredients that generate shielding gases for protecting the arc.
Gas-shielded flux-cored arc welding – developed primarily for welding steels, obtains a shielding from externally supplied gases, similar to GMAW
Submerged Arc Welding (SAW) – uses a continuous, consumable bare wire electrode, and arc shielding is provided by a cover of granular flux. Low-carbon, low alloy, and stainless steels can be readily welded by SAW.
Electrogas Welding (EGW) – uses a continuous consumable electrode (either flux-cored wire or bare wire with externally supplied shielding gases) and molding shoes to contain the molten metal.
Shielded Metal Arc Welding (SMAW) (stick) – arc is struck between the rod (shielded metal covered by flux) and the work pieces to be joined, the impurities rise to the top of the weld in the form of slag (18-19a, handout pg. 40)
Selection of Welding Rods
Filler rod should have a tensile strength greater than the metal to be joined.
Rod must also be compatible with the welded metal
Welding positions required
Welding current (ac or dc)
Joint design (groove, butt, fillet, etc.)
Thickness and shape of the base metal
Service conditions and specifications
Production efficiency and job conditions
Welding Rod Classification (ex. E-6010)
The E- stands for electrode.
The first two numbers indicate the tensile strength
The next-to-last number gives the welding positions
The last digit of the weld rod number indicates the type of current for which the rod may be used (ac, dc straight, dc reverse), the penetration, and the type of flux around the rod.
Example: E-6010 would have a tensile strength of 60,000 psi, could be used in all positions, has a cellulose-sodium flux, could give deep penetration, and must be used with dc reverse current. (p.270-272)
Inert Gas Arc Welding
An inert gas is used to keep oxygen away from the hot metal during welding to prevent corrosion both on the surface and within the weld metal.
Gas metal arc welding (GMAW) – (metal + inert gas) electrode is continuously fed through the welding gun and is shielded by an inert gas (figure 18-18c).
Easily converted for
automatic welding machines, computer controlled welding machines, and robotics control.
Non-consumable Electrodes
Gas Tungsten ARC welding - GTAW (Tungsten inert gas, a.k.a. TIG) – Tungsten electrode not consumed, but surrounded by an inert gas and produces an arc.
Filler material is usually applied.
Gas tungsten arc welding does not produce as deep a penetration as stick or other types of welding.
GTAW is a slow method of welding, which results in an expensive product.
It can be used to weld aluminum, magnesium, titanium, and stainless steels.
Plasma-Arc welding (PAW) – when an arc is created in a plasma (ionized) gas and a filler material may or may not be applied to the weld joint
Other Welding Techniques
Electron beam welding (EBW)
the electron gun melts the parent metal, and the molten metal flows to fill the gap
heat affected zone is very narrow
welds can be several inches deep, and leaves a very clean weld.
Welding must be done in a vacuum.
Laser beam welding (LBW) - the heat from laser can be used to heat the surface of material or penetrate the entire depth of the joint (good for thin gauge metals). The major problems with the current lasers lie in the cost and bulk of the power source.
Friction Welding
Rubbing two pieces of metal or plastic together at a very high frequency.
It is simple, clean, quick, inexpensive, and effective.
Friction welds have thus far been used mainly for very small applications.
Chemical Welding
Sheets of Lucite, Plexiglas, or acrylic can be fused by acetone or methyl ethyl ketone (MEK).
The chemical simply dissolves the surfaces of the plastic. When the solvent evaporates, the surfaces repolymerize to form a true weld.
Brazing
A joining process in which filler metal is placed at or between the surfaces to be joined. The temperature is raised to melt the filler metal but not the workpiece.
Braze melts between 840-2400 degrees F
The filler material is in thin layers compared to base metal
The filler penetrates the gap by capillary attraction
Can connect dissimilar metals
Most common braze defect is lack of braze or a void
Soldering
(400-840 degrees F) joints are usually of lesser strength than brazed but parts can be joined without exposure to excessive heat
Used extensively in electronics industry because of heat sensitive components
Surface preparation and the use of fluxes are most important
Fluxes –prevents oxidation and removes slight oxide films from work piece surfaces