trevmust
New member
strong enough to use as a frame? and if so how to weld it properly? its round tube btw.
Why aluminum?
Its harder to weld, more expensive, and not as strong as steel.Don't know about flux core welding but mig welding ally is common and not too hard
The settings are just finicky
Yeah u guys only run in 110 amps
There must be some serious amps coming out your plugs?
From what I have read on the subject, welded aluminum frames for vehicles like ours would not be a good choice. Apparently the aluminum welds are brittle, and they have a low fatigue strength. In short, all of the frame flexing would be cracking welds all over the place. I'm not sure what it is that motorcycle manufactures do to their aluminum frames, probably some form of heat treating to remove stress. Unless you have a huge oven, heat treating an entire go kart frame would be tough!
MIG welding aluminum is just like MIG welding steel, except you need some specialized/more powerful equipment, and all the little problems with steel are drastically exaggerated. MIG welding aluminum requires good skills with setting feed speed and voltage, usually something beyond just reading off of the chart in the machine. Aluminum also requires more heat, feed speed, and travel speed. Since aluminum is better at conducting heat than steel, aluminum will dissipate heat faster. This can often lead to cold starts, and burn-through at the end of welds. There are also special gasses (I'm using 100% argon), and techniques specific to aluminum.
Aluminum also differs from steel in that MIG welding aluminum is done with spray transfer welding, most of the time steel only requires short circuit welding. To achieve spray transfer the welding power source must provide higher voltage, this and the need for a higher duty cycle makes a 230V machine a very important part of the puzzle. Along with a larger welder, MIG welding aluminum is best done with a spool or push-pull gun. As most of you know, aluminum is a very soft metal, because of this aluminum wire will not be easily pushed all the way through a standard MIG gun. You can make some modifications to the gun so it feeds aluminum more smoothly, but if you want to do more than one or two welds you really want a specialized gun.
Unlike TIG, aluminum MIG welding is done with direct current, and without high frequency starting. Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't HF starting not necessarily required for TIG welding aluminum? I know it is very useful, but I'm under the impression that you can get by without it. I'm just starting with MIG welding aluminum (My biggest problem so far is that I burn through contact tips!) so if anyone sees a mistake please let me know. For more info on the subject, look at the link below.
http://www.weldingtipsandtricks.com/mig-welding-aluminum.html