Egon
Epic Contributor
if possible, i would cut the old a/r q/t or whatever it is off, so that you can weld the replacement blade to the mild steel of the plow.
That is what was done on the two new cutting edges I had welded on to the buckets.
if possible, i would cut the old a/r q/t or whatever it is off, so that you can weld the replacement blade to the mild steel of the plow.
I agree with Egon
I broke the cutting edge of my bucket 2 yrs ago pushing down a 18" tree. It broke at a point where a tooth bar had left a dimple in the edge and a very short crack had developed there that I didnt see. I fixed this 1/2 X 6" edge using 6011, 7018, and 11018. I started out using just the 11018 but found I was getting voids in the root pass. I went to 5/32 6011 for the root pass and then to the 7018 and then to the extreme strength 11018. It has been durable. You need about 50 more amps to burn the high strength rods and I couldnt help gouging the root when I used them.I have a piece of town plow cutting edge that I plan to weld onto my bucket to make a new cutting edge. I am going to weld it directly to what little is left of the original welded cutting edge, placing the new material under the old then welding around the edges. The suggestion I have so far is to gap the new edge slightly below the old edge (like 1/16") to prevent cracking. Then burn in the first weld at 200A using 6011, then top with a more normal 125A or so using 7018. I heard a similar suggestion from another welder for technique, but the rod type was reversed - so one of them was confused. I have 6011 and 7018 rods ready to go, however, I don't know which to use when.
Any suggestions and/or recommendations are welcome.
Thanks - JayC
I don't know about that for sure,,,,,weld something,,weld contracts as it cools,,if it ain't got no where to contract