When and why should pulse welding be performed?

Author:chinaweldingmachines 2022-03-30 10:29:50 211 0 0

Pulse welding is a form of welding in which the amperage alternates between high and low points. It keeps the overall heat input to the weld low, while still achieving the proper depth of melt.

Its pulse frequency, what the peak amperage is, what the base amperage is, and how long it spends at either amperage setting can all be adjusted to fit the weld you are making.

 

Pulse Percentage (%)

The pulse percentage is the amount of time each pulse spends in peak and base amperage. If you set the percentage to 50%, this means that 50% of the pulse period will be peak amperage and 50% of the pulse will be base amperage.

You can adjust this either way, where 90% is almost entirely peak amps and 20% is almost no peak amps. The more time you spend on the peak amp portion of the pulse, the more penetration you will get, and vice versa.


When and why should pulse welding be performed?cid=3

 

Pulse Frequency/Pulse Hertz

Pulse frequency or pulse hertz is the same thing: the number of pulses per second. For example, UNIMIG AC/DC machines have a pulse frequency range of 0.5-200Hz per second. this means that 1Hz equals one pulse per second, while 50Hz equals 50 pulses per second.

One pulse per second is relatively slow and easy for your eyes to track. 30 or more pulses are quite fast and it is difficult to see individual pulses. anything between the 5-30 pulse range can be painful for your eyes. It's kind of like staring at a flash light, it's very uncomfortable to watch and it's hard to concentrate on the weld timing.

When it comes to choosing how many pulses per second you want, it really depends on the application. If you are welding thin material, then fast pulses are usually better and will leave a high profile weld. If you are welding thicker materials, then a slow pulse is usually better and will leave a low profile weld.


TIG Pulse Welding

Pulse welding with TIG is done in almost the same way as standard TIG welding. There are only a few additional settings that need to be adjusted on the machine first. However, when you pulse weld with TIG, you can feed the filler bar in two ways (instead of one).

1. The first method is your standard tap. Depending on how many pulses per second you have it set to, you can tap the peak and pause the basic amplifier. If you only have one pulse per second, this is not hard to adapt. However, if you weld at about 50 pulses per second, your tap times can remain consistent because there is virtually no way to time the pulses because your eyes can barely see them anymore.

2. The second method is to place the wire in the joint. Now, instead of just laying it flat and soldering to it, you place the tip of the rod on the leading edge of the puddle and drag it down the weld, keeping it incorporated in the leading edge.

Both techniques work and you can use either method regardless of your number of pulses per second, but if you use the layout method on a high pulse, you won't see stacked dimes. It's still a good penetrating weld, but it won't be as aesthetically pleasing.

When you pulse, you can still use the foot pedal. You can keep it at full throttle and keep your peak amp at the level you set it at, or you can pulse within the pulse.

This means that if you have been pulsing but you still think the weld is getting too hot, you can release the pedal and lower the peak amplifier in the pulse. Your background (base) amplifier will remain the same, but the higher part of the cycle will be slightly cooler.

For example, suppose you have set the machine's peak amperage to 200 and set the base amperage to 50. depressing the foot pedal will keep the peak amperage at 200 for the entire weld.

However, if you loosen the foot pedal, your peak amp will go down to, say, 150 and your base amp will stay at 50. So, overall, the entire weld will be cooler because your peak amp is not as hot.

Then, if you decide you need more heat again, you can go back to fully depressing the pedal and increase back to the original 200 amps.

 

MIG Pulsed

There are two types of pulsed MIG welding.

1. Single Pulse - Single Pulse MIG is a spray transfer that, like TIG, alternates between peak and background currents.

MIG pulses usually do not spatter because the wire never actually touches the weld. At the peak of the cycle, droplets of metal are "sprayed" into the weld.

The background current of the pulse cycle is not enough to transfer the metal. It just holds the arc. It produces all the benefits of spray transfer (speed, no spatter, deep penetration) without all the excess heat.

Single pulse MIG welding has a sound similar to AC TIG welding with a constant high pitched beep.

2. Double Pulse - A double pulse is two pulses that occur simultaneously.

The first pulse is a standard (see: single) pulse with a peak amplifier and a base amplifier.

The second pulse, which does not transmit any wire, turns the first pulse on and off during its cycle. During the second pulse, the arc is still present, but the temperature is so low that no welding occurs.

When the second pulse is "on", the first pulse takes over (turns on) and alternates between peak amperage and base amperage, creating a weld in the same way as a single pulse. When the second pulse is "off," nothing happens.

Double pulse MIG welding is a cooling procedure because there is more downtime between high current moments, so you need to use more current in the peak to get full penetration.

It is ideal for aesthetically pleasing welds because it allows you to create the stacking angle effect of TIG using a MIG machine without the effort of an operator. It is accompanied by an intermittent high pitched buzzing sound.


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