Tecna straight electrodes online store

Tecna straight electrodes online store

Good design practices attempt to limit spot welding on appearance or cosmetic surfaces. While textured paints can be used to hide small electrode marks on finished surfaces, grinding, or filling and grinding, is often required and can double the cost of the welding operation. Often, structural elements such as stiffeners are required to reinforce large cosmetic surfaces. For these applications, designers should select material which is thinner than the material from which the appearance part is fabricated. This assures that weld shrinkage will occur on the noncosmetic part which helps to control the cost of filling and abrasive finishing.

One alternative to plug welding is “MIG spot welding”. It is similar to plug welding, although a hole is not drilled in the front sheet of metal. Instead the power of the MIG is relied upon to fully melt the top sheet and penetrate into the back sheet. This technique would require less preparation work than plug welding, but the two sheets need to be in tight contact and high amps used to complete the weld or else the weld could be very weak. Plug welding is a much more suitable technique for all but the most experienced welders.

Materials Appropriate for Spot Welding: Due to its lower thermal conductivity and higher electrical resistance, steel is comparatively easy to spot weld, with low carbon steel being most suited to spot welding. However, high carbon content steels (Carbon equivalence > 0.4wt%) are prone to poor fracture toughness or cracking in the welds as they tend to form hard and brittle microstructures. Galvanised steel (zinc coated) requires slightly higher welding currents to weld than uncoated steels. Also, with zinc alloys, the copper electrodes rapidly degrade the surface and lead to a loss of weld quality. When spot welding zinc coated steels, electrodes must either be frequently exchanged or the electrode tip surface should be ‘dressed’, where a cutter removes contaminated material to expose a clean copper surface and reshapes the electrode. Read more info on Tecna Spot Welder Arms.

As is often the case with machine tools, there are two types: portable (for ease of use but with limited performance); and stationary (better suited to intensive work and thicker metal sheet).