A
welding rod supply is
a device that provides an electric current to perform welding. Welding
usually requires high current (over 80 amperes) and it can need above
12,000 amps in spot welding. Low current can also be used; welding two
razor blades together at 5 amps with tungsten inert gas welding is a
good example. A welding power supply can be as simple as a car battery
and as sophisticated as a modern machine based on silicon controlled
rectifier technology with additional logic to assist in the welding
process.
Welding machines are usually classified as constant current (CC) or
constant voltage (CV); a constant current machine varies its output
voltage to maintain a steady current while a constant voltage machine
will fluctuate its output current to maintain a set voltage. Shielded
metal arc welding will use a constant current source and gas metal arc
welding and flux-cored arc welding typically use constant voltage
sources but constant current is also possible with a voltage sensing
wire feeder.
The nature of the CV
welding electrode is required by gas metal arc welding and
flux-cored arc welding because the ARC welder is not able to control
the arc length manually. If a welder attempted to use a CV machine to
weld with shielded metal arc welding the small fluctuations in the arc
distance would cause wide fluctuations in the machine's output. With a
CC machine the welder can count on a fixed number of amps reaching the
material to be welded regardless of the arc distance but too much
distance will cause poor welding. Check more information about ARC
welding machine, ARC welder, TIG welding machine, TIG welder, MIG
welding machine, MIG welder.
Par
welding le jeudi 29 juillet 2010
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