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High Speed Pulse TIG Welding vs
Slow Speed Pulse
>30 pps vs 1 pps
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Tig Welding
There is some benefit to pulse tig for welding near and edge, for cosmetics,
for lowering heat input and for automated tig welding applications, but
what one person benefits from a certain pulse tig setting will not
Stick Welding necessarily be the same for another welder because people weld so
differently.
What’s the difference in high speed and slow speed pulse tig
welding?
There is no one pat answer . Most people would probably say 0-10 pps is
slow and anything about 10 would be high. For me I either like 1 pps or
higher than 30 pps
Maybe slightly.
Probably not. Pulser add on units are usually only capable of 0-10 pps …
Reviews
First of all what is high speed pulse tig welding ...as opposed to low speed
pulse tig welding?
There are inverter tig welders made today capable of pulsing as high as
5000 pulses per second so again, I ask the question what is high speed
pulse tig welding.
Where is the line drawn that lets you know what is slow speed
pulse and what is high speed pulse tig?
For me, it is this…One pulse per second is slow speed pulse and 30 or
higher is high speed pulse.
Anything in between does not concern me because I don’t like it and I avoid
it like the plague. . Simple as that.
And when I say I don't like pulse rates between 2 pps and 29, what I really
mean is that I HATE it.
At least for welding steel on DC. (Aluminum is another story and mid range
Safety pulsing is not as hard to watch.)
In fact, Pulse tig welding at ranges of 10-12 has been known to make
preachers cuss, monks break vows of silence, and perfectly good tig
welders walk off the job and become florists.
Now that inverter tig welders are popular and dependable, I have
More Tips
experimented a lot with pulse ranges of 30-500 pps and have come to this
conclusion...
The welder..that is the person wearing the welding helmet makes more
difference than the pulse rate.
There are welders that pulse manually with the foot pedal that can lay a
stack of dimes that looks like artwork using an old POC Miller DialArc.
There are welders that never pulse that can lay a stack of dimes bead that
looks like a machine did it using a scratch start dry rig using an antique DC
stick power source.
BUT...
Usually, if you give those welders a few more bells and whistles and they
really understand how to use them, the welds will be even better with
slightly less overall heat input.
I read one article where a gun manufacturer estimated that they got parts
75 degrees less hot by welding...and that translated into 25% less
distortion that had to be straightened on the final product.
For most people, that benefit would hardly be noticed. First of all, they
measured the temperature of the part after welding with an infrared heat
gun with digital readout.
* Amperage set to roughly twice what I would set it to without using pulse
(remember, you get an average of the high and low pulse amperage
settings and your output will be less with pulse)
* I like pulse frequency set to 39 (I like that number because it's easy to
remember)
I found these setting to work great for welding near an edge, for filling a
hole in sheet metal, or for weld build up of a thin edge.
Changing the pulse frequency to 1 pps and leaving the other settings alone
let me lay a nice stack of dimes bead on thick stainless whether I left the
rod in the puddle or dipped on the high pulse.
PS