Gas Tungsten Arc Welding – How to radically improve your Tig welding technique
Gas Tungsten Arc welding is the appropriate name for TIG welding. , may be the name, but it takes a long time to say … and since hardly anyone calls Gas Tungsten Arc welding and most everyone still refers to him as TIG, That's what I call it too.
One of the biggest challenges with TIG welding is to find something to support in that will stabilize the torch hand well enough to make a good looking weld. If you try to support your hand too close to the weld, your welding sleeve doesn't offer a lot of protection against heat, the hand is hot, and you want to have a bubble, or you stop the solder.
Each welder knows to stop can often make a weld look bad. Are many stops and starts doing a solder look like a patchwork quilt. (That is a good way of saying Fidos Asses)
TIG gloves are thin … and with reason. They need to be thin so you can feel the torch and the filler rod and make precise movements as necessary. But being so thin does not help in the heat Department. TIG gloves are very thin for protection against the heat and you'll get burned if you're not careful.
What you need is a heat shield heat resistant finger you can rest next to hot solder. And if you do not have to worry about your fingers and toes getting hot, How would that help your welding technique?
He helped mine a lot.
For welding and Piping for welding stainless steel tubes, I don't leave home without it.
He slides in your back pocket, and when I need it, I pull it out and put it on my pinky finger or middle finger and I don't worry with burns.
I not only use it for pipe welding, do you want to, castings, aluminium and cast iron manifolds if really hot while you weld them. When I slip on this heat shield, I can support right over the hot metal and be steady as a rock.
Originally published in Ezine, automatically translated to Portuguese
Source for Jody Collier




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