Mark @ Everlast
New member
Are you using a Henrob on the Aluminum?I inherited a torch setup and use it a lot. Cutting, straightening, fixing bad welds, and welding... been practicing on aluminum and this steel.View attachment 157View attachment 158
Are you using a Henrob on the Aluminum?I inherited a torch setup and use it a lot. Cutting, straightening, fixing bad welds, and welding... been practicing on aluminum and this steel.View attachment 157View attachment 158
I actually have to back way off with my oxy-acetylene torch once welding temp is achieved or I just melt everything. I just picked up a tradesman mapp gas hose/torch setup I may try welding aluminum with. For now I'm just using it to preheat for spool gun welding...I would think that a hand held propane torch would give you plenty of heat for that. If you really wanted to heat it fast, a Harbor Freight weed burner would do the trick but it would heat a large area. I would just use a Coleman with 1# bottle of propane. You can warm the whole area to drive out the moisture and then warm it more right where you are starting to weld. The heat from welding would do the rest of the area.
Once preheat temp is reached, you dont need to keep heating. Put down the torch and pick up the MIG gun and get going. I would just heat till the water vapor goes away from the area to be welded then heat the start point of welding to 400F and then no more heating should be needed as long as you keep welding.I actually have to back way off with my oxy-acetylene torch once welding temp is achieved or I just melt everything. I just picked up a tradesman mapp gas hose/torch setup I may try welding aluminum with. For now I'm just using it to preheat for spool gun welding...
I haven't checked this forum in a while but this thread stood out. I brought my Dad's oxy/acetylene set up home. He passed a few years back and I kept it at the farm for repair use, but never used it there so brought it home. I wanted to do some gas welding. I haven't done any since high school almost 40 years ago. Wanted to just play with it and see how I could do. Got some fire brick and some rods and scrap steel. Flat welds are pretty good, haven't lost my touch with that, but T fillet welds, not so good. Keep melting the steel away. Need more practice.
It's a lost art. I enjoy all aspects of oxy-fuel welding and brazing. Not the best or fastest way to get things done but a great hobby. There are a lot of cool filler metals out there for the torch.Are there no people who weld with gas (oxy-fuel)?
On 3/8 thick metal or less, I find this to be very enjoyable.
I used to gas weld a lot of stuff that was too thin to weld with stick rod. Still do a bit of gas welding rather than hook up the TIG torch but now most of thin stuff I can weld with my MIG or FCAW machines. TIG made gas welding completely obsolete, now pulse MIG is making TIG obsolete in lots of instances.