1 / 49

Introduction to Welding

Introduction to Welding. Area: Ag Mechanics Unit: Arc Welding. OAW. Oxyacetylene Tank of Oxygen Tank of Acetylene Striker Goggles. GMAW. Gas Metal Arc Tank of C25 (Oxygen/ Argon Mix) Mig Gun. SMAW. Shielded Metal Arc Electrode. GTAW. Gas Tungsten Arc

ivi
Download Presentation

Introduction to Welding

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Welding Area: Ag Mechanics Unit: Arc Welding

  2. OAW • Oxyacetylene • Tank of Oxygen • Tank of Acetylene • Striker • Goggles

  3. GMAW • Gas Metal Arc • Tank of C25 (Oxygen/ Argon Mix) • Mig Gun

  4. SMAW • Shielded Metal Arc • Electrode

  5. GTAW • Gas Tungsten Arc • Rods / Spool Gun (filler Metal) • Pedal • Non Consumable Electrode • Aluminum / Softer Metals

  6. OAC • Oxyacetylene cutting • Cutting Attachment • Different O2 & Acet. Settings • Striker • Goggles

  7. PAC • Plasma Arc Cutting • Air Supply • Cutting Torch • Clamp

  8. Objectives: To identify approved clothing for Arc Welding To determine the proper safety equipment needed for Arc Welding. To identify the parts of an Arc Welder. To identify how an Arc Welder works.

  9. Behavior • Most accidents are caused by carelessness • Caused by human error • Refrain from getting involved in poor shop behavior: scuffling playing with tools tripping running pushing hurrying projects disobeying shop rules loud talking

  10. What are the approved safety clothing and gear for Arc Welding? • Do not wear clothes that you do not want to get dirty. • Body Protection • Tight woven cotton or denim fabrics are most common and inexpensive. • Leather is the most effective but is more expensive. • Foot Protection • Leather shoes that cover the entire foot and have a high top.

  11. Approved safety clothing and gear cont’ • Hand Protection • Gauntlet type leather gloves that are heavy enough to protect hands from the heat. • Welding Helmet • Most made of lightweight, heat resistant materials • Protection for the head and face • Welding Lens • Fitted to the helmet • At least a # 10 shade • Safety Glasses • MUST be worn at all times

  12. Here’s a good example of a welder wearing all the proper welding protection

  13. SAFETY: Eye Protection • “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure” when it comes to eye protection • Always wear proper eye protection when working in the shop • A welder must be protected from harmful light radiation given off by the welding process • For welding you will be using chipping goggles and a welding helmet

  14. Here are examples of proper eye protection

  15. What are some safety practices used in Arc Welding? • Safety First • Always check equipment for warn or damaged parts • Make sure all safety gear is on and in proper working order. • WEAR YOUR SAFETY GALSSES!!!

  16. Safety practices cont’ • Good Ventilation • Welding fumes can be harmful to the welder causing implications such as: • Irritation of the respiratory tract • Metal fume fever • A condition known as siderosis • Slightly increase the risk of lung cancer • For these reasons, one should take precaution with welding fumes

  17. Welding should be done in a well ventilated area Should attempt to control fumes at the source Common ways Extracted benches Local exhaust ventilation Welding Fumes

  18. Common Ventilation Practices Extracted bench method Local exhaust ventilation

  19. What are some ways to prevent/protect ourselves from fire? • Discard frayed cords and wires • Don’t wear auto clothes in the welding shop • Keep flammable liquids away from heat • Class C fire extinguishers • for electrical and chemical fires • Fire Blanket • Use on people before trying to use a fire extinguishers.

  20. Examples of Welding Practices

  21. What is Arc Welding? • Arc Welding is the process of fusing metal together using the heat of an electric arc. • Done by sending an electric current through a coated metal rod called an electrode • Creates temperatures greater than 90000 F.

  22. What are the common terms used in Arc Welding? • Arc Welder • Machine that supplies power for the welding process • Electrode • Metal rod with a flux coating that carries the current to the base metal • Base Metal • The metal to be welded on • Arc Length • Distance from electrode to the base metal

  23. Common terms cont’ • Voltage • Measure of the electrical pressure. • Amperage • Measure of the electrical current flowing through a circuit. • Resistance • The opposite to the flow of current which converts energy into heat. • Open Circuit Voltage • Constant amount of current flowing between electrode and base metal

  24. What are the parts of a SMAW welder? • Welder • The power supply unit. • 2 types Alternating Current (AC) and Direct Current (DC) • Cables • 2 cables the electrode (+) and the grounding (-) that carry the electrical current

  25. Parts of a welder cont’ • Electrode Holder • Spring loaded clamp with insulated handles attached to the electrode cable. • Holds the electrode. • Grounding clamp • Spring loaded clamp attached to the grounding cable. • Attaches to the welding table or project to carry the current back to the welder.

  26. How does electricity flow in a welder? PositiveCable • Electricity flows from the POSITIVE cable holding the electrode, to the Base Metal and through the grounding clamp back through the NEGATIVE cable to the machine Electrode Base Metal NegativeCable

  27. AC vs. DC Current

  28. Parts of the SMAW Welder

  29. Parts of a GMAW Welder

  30. A B C D E F • Welding current too low. • Welding current too high. • Arc too long. • Welding speed too fast. • Welding speed too slow. • Proper amperage, voltage, and speed.

  31. Parts of OAW

  32. Oxygen • Colorless • Odorless • Promotes combustion (Not a flammable gas)

  33. Acetylene • Colorless • Odor • Flammable • Unstable(explosive above 15psi) • Left Handed Thread • Acetone in a “sponge” = consistent

  34. 3 Types of Flames • Carbonizing • Too much acetylene • Metal turns black and you can’t control the puddle • Neutral • equal amounts of O2 and acetylene • Oxidizing • too much O2 • Dirty and bubbling, lots of sparks

  35. Problems with OAW • Torch pops, whistles, or goes out. • If this happens you have experience backfire or a flashback Backfire vs Flashback Flashback is when gases burn in the TIP Black smoke comes out the tip, handle gets hot. • Turn off torch valves • - Turn off Tanks • Let Ms. Haslam Know • Check Equipment

  36. Other Problems • Too cold – bead sits on metal • Too Hot- bead sags through the metal *holes • Filler Rod Sticks – just wave the flame over it to get it unstuck. • Dirty tips- get it cleaned

  37. Parts of a OAW Setup

  38. Torches Cutting vs. Welding • Rose Bud • Heat Up • Cutting • Oxygen blaster • 3 torch valves • Oxygen • Acetylene • Oxygen Blaster • Welding • 2 torch valves • Oxygen & Acetylene

  39. Regulators What are the two gauges on the regulator used for? • Tank Pressure • Hose Pressure

  40. Setting Up the OxyFuel Check regulator thumb screws Turn on the oxygen valve all the way Set the correct oxygen working pressure Open acetylene cylinder valve one half turn Set the correct acetylene working pressure Light the flame Shut down the flame (Fuel first) Turn of the acetylene cylinder valve Empty acetylene hoses until gages register zero Turn off the oxygen cylinder valve Empty the oxygen hose until gages register zero Loosen regulator thumbscrews. ***Shut down:*** To shut of a torch correctly, first close the acetylene valve on the torch then close the oxygen valve

  41. Misc Safety Info • Hood Shades • Arc / Mig = #10 • OxyFuel = #5 • Potential Hazards • Shock • Fumes • U rays • Spark spatter • Fire and explosion

  42. Questions??

  43. Review for the Test

More Related