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On Jun 7, 1:49*pm, cavelamb wrote:
Michael Horowitz wrote: I'm practicing making joints. I built a simple jig to hold *two pieces of tubing parallel and about 6" apart and have notched and placed a third piece of tubing, connecting the two parallel pieces at 60* To minimize warpage from the heat (I'm using gas) I know I should tack one side of the joint, then the other, then repeat at 90* So how do I get to the other side of the joint (for the second tack) if it's lying flat against the board? Certainly the folks building a fuselage don't take it out of the jig after doing only one of the four tacks per joint - Mike The way I did mine was to tack front and back sides while in the jig. Tack left and right after it's out. Heating metal to cherry red tends to shrink it. I will measure parts as each tack is cooled to see where it needs to be shrunk to walk it back into alignment and add the next tack there. I continue this process as the welds are completed. With experience, a welder can produce tubular parts within a few thousandths of spec. Gas welding tends to heat a larger area than say TIG so parts can suffer greater warpage. However, I've carefully reheated TIG welded tubular structures with a gas flame to remove warps. I love gas welding but if I were to do another welded fuselage, I'd bite the bullet and buy a TIG welder. It's much faster and cleaner. |
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