Hi, im wondering what set up is that. As in is that a heavy duty torch and size of tanks. I want to braze 1/16 to 3/4 in steel plates. I am not sure what set up to get
Hello. The oxygen is a 300 cuft and the acetylene is around 140 cuft. Your best bet would be to keep an eye out for a used set that comes with everything you need. Just make sure the bottles are "customer owned" and in good shape. Not sure if you meant you want to braze a range of sizes from 1/16'' to 3/4'' or if you have a specific application where you want to join those 2 sizes together. I've never brazed anything thick like 3/4 steel. I'm sure it can be done but you'd have to get it pretty hot and it wouldn't be as structural as a weld. A stick welder would be good for something like that. You can find them cheap if you're on a budget. Otherwise a good MIG welder is hard to beat for general purpose steel welding, from thick to thin.
I like that, Very nice.
Nice video!! Very informative.. Keep up the great work..
Thank you!
Can you tell me what the diameter of your oxygen bottle is? Mine might be too large for a cart build that works decently. Thanks and nice video!
Hi Greg. It's a 300 cu ft bottle. I want to say it's about 9.5 inches in diameter.
Thank you!
@@falconfabrications Thanks for the reply, I really appreciate it.
Hi, im wondering what set up is that. As in is that a heavy duty torch and size of tanks. I want to braze 1/16 to 3/4 in steel plates. I am not sure what set up to get
Hello. The oxygen is a 300 cuft and the acetylene is around 140 cuft. Your best bet would be to keep an eye out for a used set that comes with everything you need. Just make sure the bottles are "customer owned" and in good shape.
Not sure if you meant you want to braze a range of sizes from 1/16'' to 3/4'' or if you have a specific application where you want to join those 2 sizes together.
I've never brazed anything thick like 3/4 steel. I'm sure it can be done but you'd have to get it pretty hot and it wouldn't be as structural as a weld. A stick welder would be good for something like that. You can find them cheap if you're on a budget. Otherwise a good MIG welder is hard to beat for general purpose steel welding, from thick to thin.
from start to finish how many hours do you have in the build?
I can't remember exactly but I would guess about 7 hours. It was a fair amount of work