Sodo
Elite Member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2012
- Messages
- 3,296
- Location
- Cascade Mtns of WA state
- Tractor
- Kubota B-series & Mini Excavator
Ground clamped was directly to the shiny SS part, should be good, but I will clean it further to eliminate that. The beltsander had sanded some steel recently & since the misbehavior is at the tungsten I'm thinking its' got steel contamination. The initial arc is OK for about one second, then it does the halo thing. So I suspect the steel bits on the surface are causing trouble as soon as the tungsten gets hotter than steel's melting temp. That's probably it. If not it was a good theory.
Will try the flapper disc that has done nothing but tungsten. I've learned why TIG welders have dedicated TIG grinding wheels...
#1) of course, the cleanliness.
but nobody ever says #2......
#2) you spend a LOT of time re-grinding the tungsten. It needs to be quick and easy. Even picking up the angle grinder, positioning it, then waiting for it to spin-down, and not setting it down where it will get contaminated, takes a lot of time when you have to do it so many times for one stinkin' little weld job.
Will try the flapper disc that has done nothing but tungsten. I've learned why TIG welders have dedicated TIG grinding wheels...
#1) of course, the cleanliness.
but nobody ever says #2......
#2) you spend a LOT of time re-grinding the tungsten. It needs to be quick and easy. Even picking up the angle grinder, positioning it, then waiting for it to spin-down, and not setting it down where it will get contaminated, takes a lot of time when you have to do it so many times for one stinkin' little weld job.