RoyJackson
Rest in Peace
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2001
- Messages
- 24,646
- Location
- Bethel, Vermont
- Tractor
- John Deere 4052R Cab,, Deere 855D UTV, Z920A Zero Turn Mower and assorted implements
No amount of heat increase will solve that problem. That weld broke because of poor design of the components to be assembled. That is about as good as it gets for an example of poor quality from some un-named asian country.
We can feel fortunate those folks aren't designing US and Canadian pipe lines to run under Nebraska. YET
I must disagree...I've seen strong welds with designs similar to that in those pictures. As long as most of the heat is on the heavier section, the weld should have held.
One caveat: Heat, of course, radiates. I don't know what all is inside the cylinder, but I suspect too much heat may damage the internal components.
So, it appears to be more process, then design, related.
As far as the origin of the component, we really don't know that...could even be one of the OP's weld projects.
I'm not a fan of that "un-named asian country" you refer to...but you don't know if this is an import.