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Author: Subject: MIG Welding Aluminium.
The Baron

posted on 14/6/06 at 08:15 PM Reply With Quote
MIG Welding Aluminium.

I have a crack in my RS2000 alloy sump....... 'Bummer!'

Has any one got any experience or advice with welding aluminium using a MIG welder with argon-shield gas?

Cheers in advance.

The Baron

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jamesbond007ltk

posted on 14/6/06 at 08:24 PM Reply With Quote
Mig welding aluminium is not advisable imho. The only times I have been deperate enough to give it a go i ended up blowing holes through the ali, even on low low power.

Cast ali sumps do not get on very well with MIG welders.

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Hugh Paterson

posted on 14/6/06 at 09:25 PM Reply With Quote
Its possible, but most Migs that are capable of welding ali are job specific or are programmed to do both, your typical semi pro or hobby Mig dont usually work well, good quality pro gear has for instance a torch that pulls the wire rather than the more common push rollers. The ali wire is a lot softer and tends to scrunch in the liner/torch. Check out local welders with a pulse Tig, wont cost much if u haggle
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Chippy

posted on 14/6/06 at 09:48 PM Reply With Quote
I have welded sheet alloy with my MIG, and made a fair job, (after a good amount of practice). I think that when you weld cast though its a different ball game. Mind you what 007 said makes more sence, get somebody to TIG it. atb Chippy
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owelly

posted on 14/6/06 at 10:02 PM Reply With Quote
I have used the 'Lumiweld' sort of stuff for fixing holes in bike casings. I've managed a leak proof mend but it wasn't pretty!
You clean the area and then soot it with a sooty acelylene flame. Then heat it with the oxy/acetylene untill the soot burns off, then scratch the Lumiweld stick into the joint.
If I had the choice, I'd take it to see a TIG man.

[Edited on 14/6/06 by owelly]





http://www.ppcmag.co.uk

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JohnN

posted on 14/6/06 at 10:32 PM Reply With Quote
Best option I imagine for a crack, alternative to a tig repair, would be the low temparature aluminium "solder" stuff that there always seems to be a demo of at every show, Lumiweld? or similar.
At the Stoneleigh show the guy was soldering coke cans to monkey metal to ally sheet, looked like a piece of cake to do. I imagine soldering up a crack would be a simple case of sawing out a gap and filling it. However, the stuff wasn't cheap
A friend of mine welded both mine and his shortened sumps with a 3 phase mig, it pushed 0.8mm wire and with a few setup problems, did the job, however, it needed a lot of amps and pretty it aint!

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Peteff

posted on 14/6/06 at 11:13 PM Reply With Quote
Plenty amps, fast wire feed and argon gas. A slightly oversize tip helps and teflon liner. Glue it up with some JBWeld and save yourself the hassle.





yours, Pete

I went into the RSPCA office the other day. It was so small you could hardly swing a cat in there.

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trikerneil

posted on 15/6/06 at 05:42 AM Reply With Quote
Stay away from Looniweld, DAMHIK.

Get it proffesionally welded





ACE Cafe - Just say No.

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John Bonnett

posted on 15/6/06 at 07:01 PM Reply With Quote
Hi, the good news is that your sump can be repaired. A TIG welder will have no trouble in welding cast aluminium. It should not cost a fortune and it will save you the price of a new sump.

Best of luck

Cheers

John

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PaulBuz

posted on 15/6/06 at 07:45 PM Reply With Quote
Just mig it .Its not THAT difficult!!

http://www.locostbuilders.co.uk/viewthread.php?tid=46627





ATB
Paul

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Mark Allanson

posted on 15/6/06 at 08:26 PM Reply With Quote
I concur, not difficult at all, just keep looking at the edges of the weld pool, if the sharp edge disappears, trigger off for a split second and carry on. You get plenty of warning of a blow through.





If you can keep you head, whilst all others around you are losing theirs, you are not fully aware of the situation

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