Yeah, I've been slackin' again. I've been enjoying our "Spring of deception" while it lasts. I have managed to fit up some more tubes. Pipe straps keep them located.I lost a day trying to figure out what was going on with my new found TIG skilz. The more I practiced, the worse I was getting. Frustrating, to say the least. Went back to square one, and found the tungstens that I had just been sharpening were contaminated and causing the puddle to look wonky. (technical term.) I'll practice some more today before tacking these tubes..
Pete.. you know the old saying, "Those that can do, and those that can't teach?" I can teach TIG welding.. I've contaminated the tungsten in every way possible, I think.(1) touching the filler to it(2) dipping it into the puddle(3) not enough flow of Argon(4) post flow too short(5) moving the torch away from the puddle before post flow is over(6) getting the tungsten too hot when grinding, especially using a cut off wheel to shorten it. Don't do that.. just break it to shorten it. (7) moving the filler rod away from the argon before post flow is over. This contaminates the weld on the next start.Yesterday, I found another. I was tacking in a cabane when the furnace kicked on and blew the Argon away. When you do it right, the tungsten stays shiny after welding.I still can't weld worth a crap. My rebuilt left hand is the biggest issue because of the subtle movements needed with the filler rod.Edit: forgot #8 Have a dedicated tungsten sharpening station. I use a belt sander.
Great looking fuselage! Super strong sawhorses.
Don't do as I did. Forgot all the little tabs.