Jeremy that is a cool site. Bookmarked that one. I agree about having to switch leads. Sometimes if we have enough machines we will have one for stick, and one for tig. But remember we are not moving far. The tubes are very close together. On a typical outage working on a 350 to 750 megawatt boiler there are 250 -300 boilermakers on site. Thats days and nights included. Half of those are welding tubes, the others are working on rigging parts in, or welding plate in duct work or the like. Sometimes its hard to get a welder... . there are fights over leads and such. We used to grind our own tungsten, but now the contractor buys it sharpened. The tool room man touches them up on a bench grinder or a Piranha II. They are neat, with a diamond wheel. Greg makes a good point about 2%.
GiesJ- Yeah, we are governed by ASME and AWS. But what has changed since I got in was that the heavy wedding band created cavitation on steam tubing.
I am far from an expert on this subject. Just passing on what I have learned.
Dave
GiesJ- Yeah, we are governed by ASME and AWS. But what has changed since I got in was that the heavy wedding band created cavitation on steam tubing.
I am far from an expert on this subject. Just passing on what I have learned.
Dave
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