Brazing Tutorial - Stainless Steel to Stainless Steel

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2022
  • James shows how to braze similar metals this time. Whilst this could be achieved by welding, we wanted to show how you can also braze two metals of the same time to create a very solid join. Again using our SilverBraze 55T silver brazing rods to achieve the bond.
    Available at solprobrazing.co.uk

Komentáře • 18

  • @darrylng9562
    @darrylng9562 Před měsícem +1

    Thank you Sir for the demonstration and most importantly with the informative explanation 🙏💫

  • @lolwhittingham
    @lolwhittingham Před 2 měsíci

    Great vid thank you. can I just ask what is the cleaning solvent you use ? Thanks again Lolwit

  • @donnyh3497
    @donnyh3497 Před rokem +5

    Nice video. Can aluminum be brazed or is the melting point too low?

    • @MonzaRacer
      @MonzaRacer Před rokem +1

      Silver solder or one of the low heat aluminum/zinc repair rods which were used to repair pot metal ,which is zinc rich, grills and accessories.

    • @leonardpearlman4017
      @leonardpearlman4017 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yes! There are special brazing alloys and in some cases flux. There is aluminum brazing with flux and also without. The flux is a real pain, it has all disadvantages! Corrosive, toxic, hard to buy, short shelf life! The results with it are amazing! Oh, well. The alloy is something like Aluminum with a lot of Silicon. The Lumi-Weld (HTS-2000, and many others) is proprietary, but aluminum/zinc is common as someone has mentioned here. That works, too! You really do have to follow the directions and practice.

  • @umeshsharma4080
    @umeshsharma4080 Před rokem

    Hi i am umesh Sharma
    Can you suggest the best low cost brazing alloy for ms to ss 304 pipes

  • @laignechfaelad
    @laignechfaelad Před rokem

    Excellent vid. The use of MAPGas is great as well. Helps me realise that I do t need an expensive oxy setup.
    Question though. Can you braze close to the original site without melting the first one? I remember hearing (apocryphally) that the composition of silver solder changes meaning it needs a higher heat once its set?

    • @mikehindley3
      @mikehindley3 Před 9 měsíci

      Some solder manufacturers make alloys with various melting points specifically so you can do multi-stage braze operations on things like boilers. It is very possible to melt (and ruin) existing joints when brazing on new features.

  • @nemodivermalaysia
    @nemodivermalaysia Před 2 měsíci +1

    What kind of flux did u used?

  • @JaspreetSingh-og8kr
    @JaspreetSingh-og8kr Před 11 měsíci

    excellent job sir post more videos regarding manufacturing process

  • @joenguyen1733
    @joenguyen1733 Před 9 měsíci

    Please show me the label of the Flux and solder so I can buy them

  • @LaurenceGough
    @LaurenceGough Před 9 měsíci +1

    Mine didn't melt like that at all, despite getting it cherry hot red as well, I even tried two different torches at once. Could it be not enough flux? I was using coated flux rods.

    • @Tubecraft1
      @Tubecraft1 Před 5 měsíci

      Did you coat the work in flux also?

  • @jamesglode7171
    @jamesglode7171 Před 8 měsíci

    PICKLE IT

  • @usernamemykel
    @usernamemykel Před 10 měsíci

    "That's mechanically cleaned..." then rubs his naturally oily, urine acidic fingers on it - he's no scientist, that's for sure!

    • @Vir9il
      @Vir9il Před 10 měsíci +15

      He then cleans it with solvent, followed by flux.