Kevin Bacon 5 Posted October 17, 2006 No not the plane, although that would be nice, but the Welder :-) Not getting very far with a custom turbo pipe, so thought I'd have a crack at it myself. I wouldn't know a good Mig from a w@nky one tbh, so can any of you budding welders recommend a half decent Mig welder that won't cost the price of 5 custom made turbo downpipes? Cheers! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
GazzaG60 0 Posted October 17, 2006 what do you want to weld? ali, steel what thickness? i have little experience but if its ali then id go tig. thin ally is difficult to mig from experience of my inlet. thinner wire and ultra clean gas was my issue. warming the metal also helps. my mate has done most of mine for me. ill ask him what steel ones he uses and get back to you. we have made a couple of downpipes before one with wastegate dump, the other without. one stainless the other mild. no issues here Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kevin Bacon 5 Posted October 17, 2006 Cheers for the reply. I want to weld stainless to make a 3" V band downpipe. I've seen a few Migs in Halfords and machine mart for reasonable money, but I don't know what brands are any good and which are pants! I'll need to teach myself how to seam weld pipe on some scrap metal first!! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Toad 0 Posted October 17, 2006 TIG is the only way for aluminium. They're like everything in this game Kev, the bigger, and more expensive the better. We had some decent ones at my old job, think they were £5-700 new, stood about 3-4 foot high on little wheels.. You want a good long lead to the hand peice, and a nice long earth too. I wouldn't bother with any of these ones that you can just about pick up, they've not got the beans, although the new inverter technology is making stuff smaller and cheaper. I'd try to get on a bit of a course too, even if it's just to learn the what the settings on the welders do. A decent Mig will do you well, it'll do anything you want in automotive terms, so it'll be a good investment. The only thing i'd make sure you do, is take the spool of wire out and store it somewhere warm and dry. because they do get a layer of corrosion on the wire, which seriously degrades the quality of the welding. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Toad 0 Posted October 17, 2006 Sorry, I just noticed you said stainless.... I wouldn't bother, there are various mettallurgical issues with stainless, although my brain hurts and i can't remember right now. But it goes along the lines of making the weld area more brittle and corrode easily due to the inclusions in the steel, (the chromium and the other stuff) forming 'clumps' in the FeC phase... or something Perhaps it's the presence of the martensite phase that's the problem??? Sorry mate, I just can't remember the reasons right now, but without the use of proper heat treatment-time/temp controlled ovens it's a real bugger. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kevin Bacon 5 Posted October 18, 2006 OK cheers for that dude! Good info! I've found all the bits I need here:- http://www.jetex.co.uk/website/custom_p ... a=3.0+inch So what I'll do is peice them together with tape and then take it somewhere to be tack welded, offer it up to the car to double check/adjust and then get it fully welded up! I think this is the cheapest/easiest option! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Toad 0 Posted October 18, 2006 Sorry i wasn't very 'with it' last night, and I still can't quite remember what I'm trying to say, I only spent 4 1/2 years doing metallurgy at Uni :oops:, If you were to weld it up yourself you'd want stainless steel wire, which would be fairly pricey I would imagine. Best bet would be to Tig it up. I think you've gone for the best option, the last thing you want to be doing is distorting your nicely shaped downpipe with the welder, or leaving imperfections that'll need more work shortly down the line... It'll get pretty hot too I imagine. Welding is a proper art, and takes a lot of patience and practice to get right. Forgot to mention earlier that you should be very carefull of the UV given off by the arc, it's very very easy to get sunburnt by it, as I've learnt twice now, most recently leaving a 1 1/2 by 3 inch blister on my leg! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites