Thank you for viewing and leaving positive feedback. You're so smart to find out right from your head that I drilled a small hole. Thank you very much, looking forward to your comments. God bless you.
Thank you for watching the video and leaving a positive comment. In the video, I performed 2 welding methods. If you have any good methods, please leave a comment. Maybe I can learn a little more technique from you. God bless you.
Thank you for watching the video and leaving a positive review. My nails are often used to pry hard cracks without having to use sharp objects. Thank you very much.
So you soldered what is quite obviously stainless steel. (Aluminum won't glow or change color like that and would be difficult to heat with butane) That's not going to hold well. For stainless you want a fitting that fits snugly in the hole, and then you want to flux the metal and have capillary action draw the solder into the joint similar to sweat soldering a copper pipe. I'm also not a big fan of the copper tube in the hole. Id like to perhaps drill a small hole. Then take a flat head screw, hot glue the head to a coat hanger or piece of welding rod, and put it through the hole. Then put some sort of a bushing over it and a nut and tighten the nut pulling it through the hole. Then repeat the process with a slightly larger Allen head screw. That should get you flange that you can slip your copper tube snugly into and solder it in place. Better still, you could solder a flare fitting into it.
Thank you for watching and leaving your comments, your comments are great ideas that help me create new ways of doing things. In the video, I instructed the audience to use aluminum welding rods to weld stainless steel in the simplest and easiest way, and to use tin to weld copper and stainless steel in the fastest way. Thank you very much for viewing and commenting. God bless you...
Nice lol drill hole for pressure...🤣😂💣
Thank you for viewing and leaving positive feedback. You're so smart to find out right from your head that I drilled a small hole. Thank you very much, looking forward to your comments. God bless you.
Doesn't that need a pressure/vacuum relief valve?
You could probably build one into the lid just a little flap valve
Thank you for watching and for your great question. Right at the beginning I created it, can you review it and leave comments? Thank you very much
That's sketchy af
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Thats soldering not welding.
Thank you for watching the video and leaving a positive comment. In the video, I performed 2 welding methods. If you have any good methods, please leave a comment. Maybe I can learn a little more technique from you. God bless you.
Ugh. Guys with creepy nails.
Thank you for watching the video and leaving a positive review. My nails are often used to pry hard cracks without having to use sharp objects. Thank you very much.
So you soldered what is quite obviously stainless steel. (Aluminum won't glow or change color like that and would be difficult to heat with butane) That's not going to hold well. For stainless you want a fitting that fits snugly in the hole, and then you want to flux the metal and have capillary action draw the solder into the joint similar to sweat soldering a copper pipe. I'm also not a big fan of the copper tube in the hole. Id like to perhaps drill a small hole. Then take a flat head screw, hot glue the head to a coat hanger or piece of welding rod, and put it through the hole. Then put some sort of a bushing over it and a nut and tighten the nut pulling it through the hole. Then repeat the process with a slightly larger Allen head screw. That should get you flange that you can slip your copper tube snugly into and solder it in place. Better still, you could solder a flare fitting into it.
Thank you for watching and leaving your comments, your comments are great ideas that help me create new ways of doing things. In the video, I instructed the audience to use aluminum welding rods to weld stainless steel in the simplest and easiest way, and to use tin to weld copper and stainless steel in the fastest way. Thank you very much for viewing and commenting. God bless you...