08 Paw
08 Paw
Water cooled
copper nozzle
Shielding
gas cup
Plasma welding torch
operates at very
high temperatures
cooling is
mandatory
heavy and bulky
limitations on hand
held torches
alignment, setting,
concentricity of
tungsten electrode
needs precision
Gases for plasma welding
•Argon for carbon steel, titanium, zirconium, etc
•Hydrogen increase heat Argon + (5-15%)
Hydrogen for stainless steel, Nickel alloys,
Copper alloys
•Argon + Helium mixtures (min 40%) give a
hotter arc but reduces torch life
•Shielding gases as for
TIG
•shielding gas flow
rate 10-30 l/min
•back purge as for TIG
(also for keyhole)
PAW advantages
improved arc stability at very low currents
greater energy concentration higher welding
speed
narrower beads less distortion (as much as 50%)
tungsten electrode is recessed inside the torch no
danger of tungsten inclusions
increased torch stand-off distance makes the weld
pool much easy to control
arc column is cylindrical easier out-of-position
welding
very deep penetration (keyhole) reduced weld
time
PAW disadvantages
narrow constricted arc little tolerance for joint
misalignment
manual plasma torches are heavier than TIG
torches difficult to manipulate
more complex equipment than TIG expensive
except Al alloys, keyhole plasma is restricted to
the flat position
torch must be well maintained for consistent
operation costly
Plasma cutting
•no need to promote
oxidation no preheat
•works by melting and
blowing and/or
vaporisation
•gases: air, Ar, N2, O2, mix
of Ar + H2, N2 + H2
•air plasma promotes
oxidation increased
speed but special
electrodes need
•shielding gas - optional
•applications: stainless
steels, aluminium and thin
sheet carbon steel
Plasma cutting
Plasma cutting features
Advantages Limitations
•Can be used with a wide •Limited to 50mm (air
range of materials plasma) thick plate
• High quality cut edges • High noise especially
can be achieved when cutting thick
• Narrow HAZ formed sections in air