 |
Start Your Own High-Paying Career In
Welding With This Welding Course
At last
you can now start to learn welding - the
art of joining and cutting metals with
The Welding Course - right at the
comfort of your home in your free time! |
A
Career In Welding and Cutting Metals
Dear friend,
Would you like to start a
potentially lucrative career or business with a
welding skill?
Acquiring a new skill in
welding could give you a potentially high-paying
career (Salary Range: $13.00-$26.44 per hour).
It could also open for you a
floodgate of new opportunities with various
businesses and arts and crafts that you have only
dreamt about of starting and enjoying.
At last you can now start to
learn welding - the art of joining and cutting
metals with The Welding Course - right at the
comfort of your home in your free time.
The Welding Course is the
textbook equivalent of a hands-on welding
training. It prepares and orients you to the basic
as well the advanced.
It contains all necessary
information and data in one volume, making it
possible for the workman to use one source for
securing a knowledge of both principle and practice,
preparation and finishing of the work, and both
large and small repair work as well as manufacturing
methods used in metal working.
With almost a hundred
illustrations, the 50,084-word Welding Course will
guide you step-by-step towards learning the
art and craft of joining and cutting metals.
It is a complete course in
itself that will show you comprehensive knowledge
on the following:
METALS AND ALLOYS--HEAT TREATMENT:--The Use and
Characteristics of the Industrial Alloys and Metal
Elements--Annealing, Hardening, Tempering and
Case Hardening of Steel
WELDING MATERIALS:--Production, Handling and Use of
the Gases, Oxygen and Acetylene--Welding
Rods--Fluxes--Supplies and Fixtures
ACETYLENE GENERATORS:--Generator Requirements and
Types--Construction--Care and Operation of
Generators.
WELDING INSTRUMENTS:--Tank and Regulating Valves and
Gauges--High, Low and Medium Pressure
Torches--Cutting Torches--Acetylene-Air Torches
OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING PRACTICE:--Preparation of
Work--Torch Practice--Control of the Flame--Welding
Various Metals and Alloys--Tables of
Information Required in Welding Operations
ELECTRIC WELDING:--Resistance Method--Butt, Spot and
Lap Welding--Troubles and Remedies--Electric Arc
Welding
HAND FORGING AND WELDING:--Blacksmithing, Forging
and Bending--Forge
Welding Methods
SOLDERING, BRAZING AND THERMAL WELDING:--Soldering
Materials and Practice--Brazing--Thermal Welding
OXYGEN PROCESS FOR REMOVAL OF CARBON
Think about finding a new,
high-paying career that you enjoy...and how about
creating new things from your garage out of junk
like:
|

Metal
Sculptures and other arts and crafts, or |

Useful
things that will make or save you money |


|
OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING PRACTICE
PREPARATION OF WORK
Preheating.--The practice of heating the
metal around the weld
before applying the torch flame is a
desirable one for two reasons. First, it
makes the whole process more economical;
second, it avoids the danger of breakage
through expansion and contraction of the
work as it is heated and as it cools.
When it is desired to join two surfaces
by welding them, it is, of course,
necessary to raise the metal from the
temperature of the surrounding air to
its melting point, involving an increase
in temperature of from one thousand to
nearly three thousand degrees. To obtain
this entire increase of temperature with
the torch flame is very wasteful of fuel
and of the operator's time. The total
amount of heat necessary to put into
metal is increased by the conductivity
of that metal because the heat applied
at the weld is carried to other parts of
the piece being handled until the whole
mass is considerably raised in
temperature. To secure this widely
distributed increase the various methods
of preheating are adopted.
As to the second reason for preliminary
heating. It is understood that the metal
added to the joint is molten at the time
it flows into place. All the metals used
in welding contract as they cool and
occupy a much smaller space than when
molten. If additional metal is run
between two adjoining surfaces which are
parts of a surrounding body of cool
metal, this added metal will cool while
the surfaces themselves are held
stationary in the position they
originally occupied. The inevitable
result is that the metal added will
crack under the strain, or, if the weld
is exceptionally strong, the main body
of the work will he broken by the force
of contraction. To
overcome these difficulties is the
second and most important reason for
preheating and also for slow cooling
following the completion of the weld.
There are many ways of securing this
preheating. The work may be brought to a
red heat in the forge if it is cast iron
or steel; it may he heated in special
ovens built for the purpose; it may be
placed in a bed of charcoal while
suitably supported; it may be heated by
gas or gasoline preheating torches, and
with very small work the outer flame of
the welding torch automatically provides
means to this end.
The temperature of the parts heated
should be gradually raised in all
cases, giving the entire mass of metal a
chance to expand equally and to adjust
itself to the strains imposed by the
preheating. After the region around the
weld has been brought to a proper
temperature the opening to be filled is
exposed so that the torch flame can
reach it, while the remaining surfaces
are still protected from cold air
currents and from cooling through
natural radiation.
One of the commonest methods and one of
the best for handling work of rather
large size is to place the piece to be
welded on a bed of fire brick and build
a loose wall around it with other fire
brick placed in rows, one on top of the
other, with air spaces left between
adjacent bricks in each row. The space
between the brick retaining wall and the
work is filled with charcoal, which is
lighted from below. The top opening of
the temporary oven is then covered with
asbestos and the fire kept up until the
work has
been uniformly raised in temperature to
the desired point.
When much work of the same general
character and size is to be handled, a
permanent oven may be constructed of
fire brick, leaving a large opening
through the top and also through one
side. Charcoal may be used in this form
of oven as with the temporary
arrangement, or the heat may be secured
from any form of burner or torch giving
a large volume of flame. In any method
employing flame to do the heating, the
work itself must be protected
from the direct blast of the fire.
Baffles of brick or metal should be
placed between the mouth of the torch
and the nearest surface of the work so
that the flame will be deflected to
either side and around the piece being
heated.
The heat should be applied to bring the
point of welding to the highest
temperature desired and, except in the
smallest work, the heat should gradually
shade off from this point to the other
parts of the piece. In the case of cast
iron and steel the temperature at the
point to be welded should be great
enough to produce a dull red heat. This
will make the whole operation much
easier, because there will be no
surrounding cool metal to reduce the
temperature of the molten material from
the welding rod below the point at which
it will join the work. From this red
heat the mass of
metal should grow cooler as the distance
from the weld becomes greater, so that
no great strain is placed upon any one
part. With work of a very irregular
shape it is always best to heat the
entire piece so that the strains will be
so evenly distributed that they can
cause no distortion or breakage under
any conditions.
The melting point of the work which is
being preheated should be kept in mind
and care exercised not to approach it
too closely. Special care is necessary
with aluminum in this respect, because
of its low melting temperature and the
sudden weakening and flowing without
warning. Workmen have carelessly
overheated aluminum castings and, upon
uncovering the piece to make the weld,
have been astonished to find that it had
disappeared.
Six
hundred degrees is about the safe limit
for this metal. It is possible to gauge
the exact temperature of the work with a
pyrometer, but when this instrument
cannot be procured, it might be well to
secure a number of "temperature cones"
from a chemical or laboratory supply
house. These cones are made from
material that will soften at a certain
heat and in form they are long and
pointed. Placed in position on the part
being heated, the point may be watched,
and when it bends over it is sure that
the metal itself has reached a
temperature considerably in excess of
the temperature
at which that particular cone was
designed to soften.
The object in preheating the metal
around the weld is to cause it to expand
sufficiently to open the crack a
distance equal to the contraction when
cooling from the melting point. In the
case of a crack running from the edge of
a piece into the body or of a crack
wholly within the body, it is usually
satisfactory to heat the metal at each
end of the opening. This will cause the
whole length of the crack to open
sufficiently to receive the molten
material from the rod. |

 |
Unequivocal 60-day Money-back Guarantee
If for any
reason you are not satisfied with this
ebook, send me an email for a full
refund of your money! |
Your name here
Please note.
The ebook is in PDF. file format. You need an Adobe
Acrobat Reader to be able to read the ebook. If you
do not have Adobe Acrobat Reader installed in your
computer, you can download it at
http://www.adobe.com.
It's completely FREE.
|