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Peter Wiley
 
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Default Seamaship Question #36

In article , Frank
Boettcher wrote:

On Sat, 29 Apr 2006 17:56:19 -0400, "Bart Senior" .@. wrote:

1 point to Frank. MAPP Gas works well.


I'll take the point, however, I was a fitter/welder in my early life
and also did instrumentation tubing and piping building offshore deck
sections and platforms. I don't think I ever ran into a joint I
couldn't solder with propane because of cold or windy weather.


I have. Pipes with persistent water drips/leakage. My std trick was to
shove some bread up the pipe to act as a dam; it'd blow thru/dissolve
as soon as water pressure was back on. Alternatively I'd use
oxy-acetylene and just boil the water away.

Never
did wiring that way.


Ditto.


Most days, however, you could not use GMAW (Mig) welding because the
inert shield gas blew away to quickly causing porosity.


Yep. For outside work I use either a stick welder and E4111 (6011 in
USA land) rods or flux cored wire on the MIG. Just been doing that
using a spoolgun (http://www.readywelder.com) for fixing steel
reinforcing.

PDW

Frank

This is the simplest way. Although I liked some of the
other answers too.

"Frank Boettcher" wrote

"Bart Senior" .@. wrote:

You are trying to solder a connector in cool high winds.
Because of the wind, the part cools faster than your
propane torch can keep it hot.

If you can't get out of the wind and can't wait to complete
the job, what is the simplest work around to get your part
soldered? [1 pt]


Switch out the cylinder to MAPP or some other higher BTU alternative.