Yes.does some of the carbon burn during welding of cast iron (gray, ductile)?
Yes and no. Preheat/postheat is just one common way of preventing cracks. Keeping the cast from getting hot is another. I've had luck with that on very thin castings.I read there is a decarb around the HAZ, I know there’s a massive shrink due to a peritectic transformation that causes cracks without preheat
Mark
I want to say last time I looked at nickel 99 rods was a few months ago and a 10 pound can was about $300 or maybe a bit more.Nickle rods work ,but need a special technique......couldnt imagine what they cost now.....anyhoo,using a bronze is easy ,because the bronze has a soft transformation around 400C ,which is where iron has a brittle transformation.....the bronze can easily yield as it cools......ive seen many bronze welds on old engines that are over 80 years old,and havent shown any signs of the electrolytic corrosion often predicted .......I have an old Mack 711 diesel motor in the yard,which has the whole back of the block welded back on with nickle deposit......this was a common repair when B61 s were plentiful,the 3/4 ton gearbox would break the back off the block on rough roads......nothing but rough roads here in the 1960s.
Yes and no. Preheat/postheat is just one common way of preventing cracks. Keeping the cast from getting hot is another. I've had luck with that on very thin castings.
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Water.How do you weld something without getting it hot?
Water.
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Obviously it still gets hot, but the heat is pulled back out very rapidly. So the HAZ is very small.
You can argue that it doesn't work or it's a bad idea... I'm just going off of what I know from first hand experience welding cast iron. Stuff that I learned "the hard way". Lots of trial and error.
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Nah, usually when I weld, I mix up part A and part B and slap it on. Works GREAT.I've never had any luck getting filler rod to stick unless I melt the parent metal and that requires getting it hot.
Right. I suppose "going to extremes" to minimize the HAZ would be a good way of putting it.So it appears that what you meant was not getting the whole piece hot. Kind of like stitch welding cast iron with a arc welder and alloy rod. Lots of small stich welds.
When I used nickel rod the end result was so hard you couldn't machine it. If you don't need to drill tap or resurface your part it's probably fine?
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