Brazing With and Without Flowing Nitrogen + Using Silver Solder Rings

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024
  • Tim Bagnall demonstrates brazing with and without nitrogen flowing with 5 different rod/solder types. He also demonstrates the use of solder rings as well as the Hilmor swage tool.
    When Tim brazes without flowing nitrogen, the inside of the copper tube gets covered in black scale. That scale can flake up and clog up your filter-driers, discharge line mufflers, and other components that connect to your copper piping. When he opens the piping up, the copper is weak and corroded.
    However, when Tim brazes WITH nitrogen, the copper tube remains black scale-free, regardless of solder type. Tim uses the Harris 0, Sil-Fos 15, Blockade, Blockade FC, and Safety-Silv 56 FC solder on his joints while flowing with nitrogen. (Remember, most of the time, flux-coated rods are for dissimilar metals.)
    When using solder rings WITHOUT flowing nitrogen, Tim starts off by using the Hilmor swage tool. He then uses the Sil-Fos solder rings. Some scale developed inside the pumping without nitrogen. When Tim uses solder rings WITH nitrogen, no scale forms on the inside of the piping. However, exceptionally hot tubing can also contribute to flake formation.
    Tim also shows us his port setup.
    A final word of caution: solder rings may slip and fall down into the joint if they get too hot.
    Read all the tech tips, take the quizzes, and find our handy calculators at www.hvacrschoo....

Komentáře • 175

  • @neilcomparetto5282
    @neilcomparetto5282 Před 7 lety +28

    Bryan, thanks for creating HVAC school. I'm looking forward to future content.

    • @HVACS
      @HVACS  Před 7 lety +3

      Neil Comparetto thanks Neil, I appreciate the kind words

  • @ericeckler8445
    @ericeckler8445 Před 7 lety +49

    I've been a tech for over 27 years, never an installer, however, I have done many changeouts and repairs. Most problems I have seen is ash in the lines, resulting in clogged filters and acid burnouts. I have always used Sil-floss 15% and NITRO...ALWAYS. I have never had to back to a job that I did, ever! Except for clean and check, of course! This is a great video I wish the younger installers and techs would watch.
    I have come up on many jobs from other contractors and there wasn't a nitro bottle in sight and they were burning sticks. I questioned them and they said NITRO is just for pressure testing....morons.. Nitro is cheap, use it!
    I don't have a flow meter like Tim. I use the old finger method and if I can hear it flowing, it's good. Might use a bit more nitro, but I don't care.
    Never saw a video from HVAC school before tonight. Watched the one about R22 being "illegal".
    Led to the next video I watched.
    I rarely (actually never, first time)comment on youtube videos but I thought you were very educated on the subject as a young man(trust me, I am much older) and to find a younger man who cares about his trade and does it right is quite rare, in my opinion.
    Carry the torch my young friend!

    • @MrGarcon98
      @MrGarcon98 Před 4 lety +3

      nice comments ,,,,i am 66 years old retired now for a long time ,,,,techs will do whatever they can get away with , the old saying i heard a lot is "been doing it like this for years " even with my neandertall school buddys LOL ,,,,,,i was a cert welder for over 30 years experience in the field before i went to school for HVAC ,,,,beleive me i heard it all ,,,,just do whats right and just and honest i beleive is good . merry christmas ,,,,

    • @MrGarcon98
      @MrGarcon98 Před 4 lety +2

      in mexico r22 is used all day long i hear ! only in the us the ozone is bad lol ok today is july 30th 2021 just for the record i am adding to my comment , like way way after i wrote it ,,,it was actually a tech servicing my neighbors unit ! we where saying at how crazy the prices are getting ,,,on r22,,wow now i am 67 3 months 68 is around the corner ,,,,,stay safe guys dont get hurt , i had a bad injury myself lifting things i should not have been lifting i am told i will have chronic pain for the rest of my life ,,,,just saying get some help use your heads please ,,,,pain does hurt like hell ,,,,,peace/ love to all people

    • @TSPhotoAtlanta
      @TSPhotoAtlanta Před 4 lety +3

      @@MrGarcon98 The ozone layer protects the earth, all of it. As it is damaged or removed, countries nearer the equator will suffer sooner. Places like Mexico. Keep messing around, don’t care for the environment that keeps you alive, see what it gets you, haha. It’s funny when people act against their own interests because of ignorance...funny or sad

    • @MrGarcon98
      @MrGarcon98 Před 4 lety +3

      @@TSPhotoAtlanta yes it happens every day and not just wih HVAC either ,,,just saying ,,,no one is getting out of here alive LOL

    • @DS-fb9te
      @DS-fb9te Před 2 lety

      👍

  • @48scorion
    @48scorion Před 2 lety +3

    I'll be damned. This is one of those things that I've been told by almost everyone I've worked with that I should forget from school. Everyone told me it doesn't make a difference. I always thought it was to prevent the brazing material from seeping into the actual line. I never considered it was because of the scale buildup. It makes so much sense now. Thank you for sharing this as I will now be insisting that brazing be done properly regardless of what the "experienced techs" say...

    • @halledwardb
      @halledwardb Před 2 lety +1

      Yes. Would you work on your mothers system that way? Nope I didn't think so. Lol

    • @gsalad2525
      @gsalad2525 Před 2 lety

      Its only good for medical uses. With water you can flush it out and for hvac you just use the vac pump to suck all that out. Run your own business and pay for the Nitrogen out of your pocket and you will see why nobody cares

    • @openyuheyeby8674
      @openyuheyeby8674 Před 2 lety

      🤣🤣

  • @paulrozinski1488
    @paulrozinski1488 Před 3 lety +3

    Bryan: Loved watching this guy braze.. THIS is how you learn, practice, practice, practice. He’s definitely going to have knee problems in a few years if he keeps this up.

  • @DamonJohnCollins
    @DamonJohnCollins Před 5 lety +10

    Our projects have always required using certified brazers and a nitrogen purge (for medical gas installation), I had no idea how dirty the copper got without the nitrogen.
    Thanks for the video.

    • @andrescardenas3664
      @andrescardenas3664 Před rokem

      Hi Damon, could you tell contact for silver solders rings? I´m just start a medical pipes installation.

  • @rodgraff1782
    @rodgraff1782 Před 4 lety +8

    A lot of people don’t realize that the copper oxide formed from not purging while brazing gets into the compressor oil and raises its electrical conductivity. When this conductive oil coats the terminal block inside the compressor, power can then track to ground and cause a terminal to blow out of the pot. You can identify a problem brewing by using a megohmmeter

  • @realvanman1
    @realvanman1 Před 5 lety +2

    And to think, the helper was about to start brazing the joints on our new A/C system while his boss wasn't there, and no nitrogen in sight! Thank goodness I caught him before he started.

  • @hiccuptrantham7644
    @hiccuptrantham7644 Před 3 lety +2

    I don't understand how anyone can dislike this video very informative excellent content appreciate the lessons keep up the good work

    • @WalkMrJ
      @WalkMrJ Před rokem

      Nitrogen charged brazing is a scam. Just a way to run up the price. And then there's the silver solder being interchanged with sil-fos (15) which is a completely different rod. And let's not forget about lighting a torch with a lighter. So.. probably teaching the wrong way to do stuff.

  • @saltrue1555
    @saltrue1555 Před 7 lety +6

    Thank you Using nitrogen when you brazing will save you from lots of issues special from clogging txv

  • @davejohnsonnola2758
    @davejohnsonnola2758 Před 7 lety +3

    have been listening and re-listening all of the podcasts (even found a way to slow down the audio) instead of talk radio during drive time. Appreciate those and now connecting more of the dots being able to visualize. Good stuff, looking forward to more.

  • @danielallred780
    @danielallred780 Před 4 lety +8

    I myself and many other colleges have brazed without nitrogen. I will never again.

  • @purplegold714
    @purplegold714 Před 4 lety +3

    Great video! I started using the press tool by Milwaukee and it makes my job much easier.

  • @Super64heavy
    @Super64heavy Před 6 lety +2

    Just found this channel and very happy with the content. Excellent series of video's that will have a direct impact on my daily service duties. Thank you!

  • @WallaceRoseVincent
    @WallaceRoseVincent Před 3 lety +2

    That was fun and I'm not even an ac repairman! Thanks Tim!

  • @tonymontana897
    @tonymontana897 Před 3 lety +1

    I would always use nitro when soldering because this is the way I was taught at TAFE here in Australia. I had a supervisor, during the course of my employment, scold me one time for bleeding nitro through and I stood up to him and told him that it is very dodgy not to and the carbon ash will contaminate the system and cause blockages at the filter drier. He was an asshole. I've never had a compressor fail as a result because all my work was clean.
    This is an excellent video.

    • @scottm3552
      @scottm3552 Před 2 lety

      Lol I just got in the field after 2 year Hvac degree, 88% on all offered Nate exams, have 300 hours of useful CZcams hours. Nobody at the job uses nitrogen I couldn’t believe it. They want the systems to fk up I think.

  • @alexzapata692
    @alexzapata692 Před 7 lety +1

    Thank you for the video, very informative and practical advice for brazing. I liked how Tim used the white paper, than tapped on it with the copper pipe after finishing brazing, it shows more emphasis why purging is important. Don't be lazy go get the nitrogen regulator and flow control.

  • @chrisb2388
    @chrisb2388 Před 4 lety +8

    Helpful tip if you're brazing without nitrogen, DO NOT cool joints afterwards with water or a wet rag. Always allow the joints to naturally cool down. Quickly reducing the temperature of the copper pipe causes every bit of that oxidation to flake off inside, therefore furthering the contamination of the refrigerant. Alot more! But regardless, when not using nitrogen, contamination is inevitable, and possible restrictions are very likely at some point in time. And you better hope you remembered to sweat in the filter/drier Haha.

  • @Giblet535
    @Giblet535 Před 6 lety +3

    This was excellent! One misleading part in the demo: silver soldering should be done with borax flux and below 840F which will create no scaling. Propane will work on small tubing, MAP gas is plenty of heat for most work, air-acetylene is pretty risky on small-medium pipe, and oxy-acetylene is going to create scale unless you're a wizard (or using nitrogen)!

    • @AGON17
      @AGON17 Před 5 lety

      Giblet535 gotta flow nitrogen!

  • @tebbink
    @tebbink Před 3 lety

    I feel like I really fit into this channel. Really explains some of the things that I often find in the field. Thx 👍

  • @YoMamashouse770
    @YoMamashouse770 Před rokem

    Thank you Tim!

  • @jimbola77
    @jimbola77 Před 7 lety

    excellent I see a lot of guy's not using nitrogen and they are called back!!!!!!

  • @aperlia6603
    @aperlia6603 Před 2 lety

    Wow what a difference flowing nitrogen makes. I always understood the concept....but until you see it...

  • @steveortiz5563
    @steveortiz5563 Před rokem

    Your comments seem to be totally C Y A , the guy did us a favor,he did a great job of simply showing proper working skills . No more comments.

  • @comforthomeexpert8923
    @comforthomeexpert8923 Před 7 lety

    I am glad I found hvac school . I am learning at lot . Thank you

  • @cedricdaryll
    @cedricdaryll Před 7 lety

    Thank you a thousand times HVAC school. its a very educational video. May God Bless you.

  • @themechanic4222
    @themechanic4222 Před 3 lety

    I do a lot of work on chillers in nyc and we required to use nitrogen no matter what and in case of burned compressor we change all the pipes before installing new one ☝️

  • @renegadenevarez749
    @renegadenevarez749 Před 3 lety +4

    A lot of ppl don’t use nitro due to: 1- being lazy to connect nitro bottle 2- wanting to complete the job faster 3-being ignorant

  • @JaimeMartinez-hd2dk
    @JaimeMartinez-hd2dk Před 2 lety

    Wow . what a difference.
    Thank you for the video

  • @mbahcarrier1629
    @mbahcarrier1629 Před 2 lety

    success for "HVAC School"

  • @mcroley591
    @mcroley591 Před 2 lety

    Nice job Tim!

  • @airlogitecQ-electrical

    thank you

  • @chrisscinto889
    @chrisscinto889 Před 6 lety

    This is exactly why i braze with nitrogen. I do this for the customer. Im sure they wouldnt want me coming back for a clogged expansion valve next season.

  • @whitesheatingairappliancer7101

    I used the rings ccx with the captain hook. It worked well.

  • @Jack_The_Biker
    @Jack_The_Biker Před 4 lety +4

    Hold up. I though rapidly cooling the joint right after brazing is a no no as it could weaken the joint? Or am I mistaken on that?

  • @sk22ng
    @sk22ng Před 3 lety +1

    Could a do it yourselfer use his MiG gas instead?

    • @mikereilly5930
      @mikereilly5930 Před 3 lety

      CZcams This "Brazing with CO2 as the inert gas" It might help with your answer.

  • @raindogs451
    @raindogs451 Před 5 lety

    sweating with stay bright is a superior connection

  • @w5cdt
    @w5cdt Před 3 lety

    Very nice demo!

  • @Jus4ya
    @Jus4ya Před 2 lety +2

    I’m a welder and have lots of argon could I use that instead of nitrogen

    • @05thampton
      @05thampton Před rokem

      Yes, done it and it fulfills the inert gas principle. It costs more. The valves and fittings all the same.

  • @amadeusrocks4967
    @amadeusrocks4967 Před 4 lety +1

    pipe sitting around in bucket how much stuff was in it from laying around

  • @juliolopes2892
    @juliolopes2892 Před 7 lety +2

    Old school, no safety glasses, not talkin shit I'm right there with ya. Not saying it's good but I do catch myself and take the walk to hunt down a pair.

    • @SovereignTroll
      @SovereignTroll Před 5 lety

      On the saws-all particularly bro. We love ya!

  • @shieldcracker
    @shieldcracker Před 4 lety +1

    Nice video. I have a job that has miles of ACR tubing brazed without Nitrogen. Now compressors and valves are failing is there a way to remove /clean up the oxide from the copper? Perhaps some fluid than be circulated then flushed out?

  • @eddiewilliams46
    @eddiewilliams46 Před rokem

    This id being done on a short piece of copper thast wide open on both ends. Now would there be any difference it it was a 3-4 foot copper tubing closed loop (other than the spot thats being brazed) that has bends and elbows and filter driers and a compressor and a metering device etc.?

  • @christopherlong3819
    @christopherlong3819 Před 2 lety

    ??? When pulling a vacume, even your filter drier wouldn't catch or condense the flacking with the vacume??

  • @donovanwilliams5424
    @donovanwilliams5424 Před 2 lety

    Nice 1st-gen Neon.

  • @alyssiac3827
    @alyssiac3827 Před 4 lety +1

    Nice video Verry educational. Can someone tell me where to get that connection piece for the nitrogen hose? And, is it always recommanded to use solder rings? Even for smaller diameters, 1/4" or so..?

  • @chrisscott1547
    @chrisscott1547 Před 2 lety

    Please mention to your sound editor that audio is very low.

  • @fhdg8624
    @fhdg8624 Před 7 lety

    very good tecnique

  • @antoniovillegas168
    @antoniovillegas168 Před 4 lety

    excellent video, thanks

  • @papajoe3832
    @papajoe3832 Před 7 lety

    I'm a believer! Wish more contractor owners/employers would insist their techs take the time to flow nitrogen.

  • @sethmeistergee
    @sethmeistergee Před rokem

    Quick question from a refrigeration guy -- when brazing a cap tube (to the output of a filter-drier) while flowing nitrogen, the small opening of the cap tube makes the flowing nitrogen exit through the joint and makes a clean braze very difficult; is there a tip for how to do that kind of braze while minimizing pinholes?

  • @carloscortez2276
    @carloscortez2276 Před 5 lety

    Great video 👍

  • @donnierobertson3088
    @donnierobertson3088 Před 4 lety

    Nice job and video

  • @johndoe-wt4ui
    @johndoe-wt4ui Před 5 lety +1

    Can we get more videos about this?

  • @eddiehvac
    @eddiehvac Před 7 lety +1

    Its crazing on how its so crucial to flow nitrogen in the system. What's the name off that tool.

  • @ImranShaikh-hs4iy
    @ImranShaikh-hs4iy Před 7 lety

    very good job it is very informative thanks.

  • @damnitdang
    @damnitdang Před 2 lety

    So you just hoot nitrogen into the pipe and let it vent out from any opening?

  • @musakavalci9470
    @musakavalci9470 Před 4 lety

    Thanks tim

  • @saywhatnow8189
    @saywhatnow8189 Před 5 lety +3

    I just use mapp gas and staybright doesn’t get hot enough to build any carbon but I’m not installing refers just Residential AC’s

  • @fabm4252
    @fabm4252 Před 4 lety +2

    Hi new to HVAC. Question so when brazing with a nitro purge i first attach the nitro from suction side then open liquid line and then flow the nitro from one side to the other while brazing? Just trying to make sure I understood..Thanks great videos keep up loading.

  • @Gears.and.Gadgets
    @Gears.and.Gadgets Před 6 lety

    Bryan, great content. You just got another subscriber. I work on commercial Refrigeration systems.

  • @1989Chrisc
    @1989Chrisc Před 5 lety +1

    Is it possible to purge without a flow meter? Or is it just hit and miss if its too much or not enough?

    • @pedassoc10
      @pedassoc10 Před 4 lety

      Cj C as long as we have been brazing med gas and refrigerant lines the American welding Society tells us we need to trickle 3 to 5 cubic through the lines. The reason why they are rather specific and the importance of using a flow meter is that The difference between 5 ft.³ per hour versus 10 or 15 psi you’re trying to negotiate on your manifold set or nitrogen regulator results in pinhole leaks and gaps in your fitting due to the nitrogen flow working against the capillary flow of your silver. It does not require a lot of pressure to displace the air and or oxygen in the line.

  • @caliljv
    @caliljv Před 7 lety +1

    Thank you for sharing this knowledge. excellent video!

  • @cubbymcelrath6185
    @cubbymcelrath6185 Před 6 lety

    Another great video
    Could someone go into detail and explain if you can leave a schraeder valve out on equalizer
    Or do you have to make the last weld w/o nitrogen??

  • @jarrenwilcox378
    @jarrenwilcox378 Před 5 lety

    So if I just sawzall my joints after no purge I'm good right? No 95/5 and stay bite #8? Awww man. All them tools in that garage and no m18 or m12 band saw? Good video!

  • @mohamedalshaikh7907
    @mohamedalshaikh7907 Před 4 lety

    Very good thanks 🙏🏼

  • @tylerbentzin5908
    @tylerbentzin5908 Před 7 lety +1

    Does any of the soot build up come out after you pressurize the system before evacuation??

  • @kinggenius6660
    @kinggenius6660 Před 7 lety

    good video thank you for making videos

  • @nickbadi3599
    @nickbadi3599 Před 3 lety

    If you cap both ends of pipe when brazing without nitrogen you get very little oxidisation as the small amount of oxygen in the pipe gets used up and no more can enter.

    • @EP1CNELSON
      @EP1CNELSON Před rokem

      Often times that will create pressure in the pipe which can can cause difficulty keeping silver in the joint

  • @prithwishdey6708
    @prithwishdey6708 Před 4 lety

    How much nitrogen pressure l will put on gauge miter when brezing.

  • @janibashamolla
    @janibashamolla Před 5 lety

    Good knowledge

  • @addison2416
    @addison2416 Před 4 lety +1

    I also flow nitrogen when I use zoom lock

  • @MayurPanghaal
    @MayurPanghaal Před 6 lety

    Thanks

  • @ThomasBahamas
    @ThomasBahamas Před 7 lety +1

    Is it also better to use a scotch pad instead of sandpaper when cleaning the joint before a braze? I was reading that in a welding pamphlet that sandpaper leaves grit on the joint, so it's better to use a scotch pad. What's your take on this practice?

    • @Jremi95
      @Jremi95 Před 6 lety

      NSNOfm78 I prefer sand cloth. No grit left behind and one 6 inch piece will last a week

    • @AWIERD1
      @AWIERD1 Před 6 lety

      Anything scrubbing the copper clean is going to leave residue doesn't matter what it is just wipe it off before fitting.

  • @jakesales7321
    @jakesales7321 Před 3 lety

    What are the silver solder copper rings called? Can't seem to find them online.

  • @stevemazzoni7069
    @stevemazzoni7069 Před 6 lety +4

    Great content, suggest safety glasses and gloves while brazing...

  • @travisewing1795
    @travisewing1795 Před 3 lety

    Why wouldn’t he use clean copper when not purging nitrogen?

  • @rickw4160
    @rickw4160 Před 3 lety

    That a dodge neon in the back??

  • @coolstaracworks7068
    @coolstaracworks7068 Před 4 lety

    For refrigerator also need same

  • @danielhernandez4145
    @danielhernandez4145 Před 5 lety

    Anyone have any large scale VRF experience? I have always been taught to use Nitro while brazing for this reason, but the guy (older/wiser) I work with believes the nitro can be simply left to push 3-5cfh at a given starting point (via brazed service port/pigtail) and still be effective down the line maybe 100ft down. Is this true?
    I know what it feels like running a light draft of nitro through a short run of pipe, but after a few elbows and 50+ feet it really doesn't feel like any air is moving (especially if it's been "Y"or ref-net'd). The only way i've seen it be effective at long distances is to up the pressure at the regulator.
    Is 3-5cfh okay when you're brazing a joint that's rounded a coil and you're 50,60,80,100+ feet down the line? Not saying he's wrong, but i'm only questioning so I can become better at what I do.

  • @sergiomansilla
    @sergiomansilla Před 7 lety

    Very good information, good video, what nitrogen is preccion used and what element used to cool the bronze pipe
    greeting cordoba argentina

  • @jfiles640
    @jfiles640 Před 2 lety

    what model torch are you using?

  • @profuse007
    @profuse007 Před 7 lety

    good contents man

  • @PyroZippy
    @PyroZippy Před 6 lety

    What school do you teach at and how can someone sign up to go?

  • @turbotrana
    @turbotrana Před 7 lety

    I wonder how argon would fair.

  • @J.James999
    @J.James999 Před 2 lety

    braze like me you ain't need nitrogen.
    13 years no acid burnout yet.
    Or clogged filter drier.
    Kinda wondering why I ever carried that heavy nitrogen tank to braze.

  • @davewilson6859
    @davewilson6859 Před 6 lety

    will you still have as much carbon when brazing a closed system. not much oxygen?

  • @LionelLiftsVegas
    @LionelLiftsVegas Před 7 lety

    I want to braze with nitro as often as possible, however get in such a rush to where I only use it for pressure testing. Iv'e now been using Zoomlock a lot now, however still need to braze in a drier or TXV. gotta purge with nitrogen. my refrigerator never has the issues that other units have. I guess that because that was work done right.

  • @1shagg420
    @1shagg420 Před 2 lety

    Wow, I'm sold. Just sucks having to go through so much more nitrogen

  • @openyuheyeby8674
    @openyuheyeby8674 Před 2 lety

    These comments are hilarious. It's like everyone's in grade 2

  • @MR-nl8xr
    @MR-nl8xr Před 7 lety

    Solder rings, yup, found my new solder.

  • @wisconsinbush2940
    @wisconsinbush2940 Před 3 lety

    We braze all the time without nitrogen. That’s what the filter is for.

  • @garyoconnordbaairrepair7775

    Could Argon have done the same as Nitrogen? They are both non-flammable gasses.

    • @13yearsaprepperr.jtilbury.51
      @13yearsaprepperr.jtilbury.51 Před 5 lety

      yes we use argon as we have it in the shop , it cost more ,,But hey ,,,, just an inert gas to sheld ,,

    • @pedassoc10
      @pedassoc10 Před 4 lety

      Yes Both are dry inert gases

  • @edwardhvacr4815
    @edwardhvacr4815 Před 7 lety +5

    Flow nitrogen tip wet your finger nail hold over the other where nitrogen flow your should feel it very little

  • @TSPhotoAtlanta
    @TSPhotoAtlanta Před 4 lety

    The sound level on this video was so low, had it turned up all of the way, but could barely hear it.
    Sound was also out of sync, but the low levels mattered.
    Funny that happened with the fancy mic and all!

  • @pinoyoptiontv5457
    @pinoyoptiontv5457 Před 4 lety +1

    It will improve your utube channel if your volume make it loud.

  • @yosdanyrodriguez2979
    @yosdanyrodriguez2979 Před 3 lety

    First I thought cooling the pipe right after is not correct and second you should never use a lighter to ignite that torch. just my thoughts

  • @hvacdr
    @hvacdr Před 4 lety +1

    Wait how is it that I and everyone I've ever seen never uses nitrogen this way. Huh???

  • @eddiewilliams46
    @eddiewilliams46 Před 3 lety

    Wait a second...... Different variables between the 2 tests.
    Scientific method 101

  • @johnchisholm7350
    @johnchisholm7350 Před rokem

    VERY informative but no goggles! He ‘ll be blind at 60 years old. John. C

  • @liamhainsworth3105
    @liamhainsworth3105 Před 3 lety

    If you’ve brazed an open pipe without nitro then looked inside, you then fully understand the need to flow nitro