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Highly conductive materials like aluminum require very high power to form quality spot welds. However aluminum alloys are routinely spot welded (see Table I for weldability). Here, cleanliness is much more of a concern than with low-carbon steels because of aluminum’s rapid surface oxidation characteristics. For optimum quality and weld performance, expensive cleaning procedures to remove surface oxide are required. For demanding applications, equipment to monitor surface resistivity from lot to lot is necessary to assure consistency of quality. This leads to a related consideration. If aluminum has been chosen for an important reason, such as lightweight or high strength-to-weight ratio, the added expense of ensuring a high-quality weld should be justified. If it has not, re-evaluation of the original material selection is in order or, perhaps, another assembling method should be considered.
If the sheets are the same thickness then the power setting used for plug welding would be the same as you would use for 1.5 times the thickness of one of the sheets. This is the sort of penetration you would expect from a plug weld. The molten pool is just breaking out of the reverse of the back sheet. The heat marks indicate the weld has arced against the back sheet rather than at the side of the hole. If you don’t get these marks then consider a little seam welding just to be sure. There is a special clamp designed for plug welding that makes life really easy. The parts you see in the photograph are attached to a normal mole grip. This clamp came in a set of three random welding clamps all of which are extremely useful.
Although aluminium has a thermal conductivity and electrical resistance close to that of copper, the melting point for aluminium is lower, which means welding is possible. However, due to its low resistance, very high levels of current need to be used when welding aluminium (in the order of two to three times higher than for steel of equivalent thickness). In addition, aluminium degrades the surface of copper electrodes within a very small number of welds, meaning that stable high quality welding is very hard to achieve. For this reason, only specialist applications of aluminium spot welding are currently found in industry. Various new technology developments are emerging to help enable stable high quality spot welding in aluminium. See more info on Tecna Spot Welder Price.
Stationary spot welders are mounted on a column with a jack and mobile arms. The frame is heavy and bulky and the machine has a welding capacity of 0.5–10mm. The body of the machine often equipped with a 380V generator and two arms with a mechanical, pneumatic or hydraulic jack to adjust operating height, as well as heat-resistant electrodes made of copper or copper-chromium alloy. No electric arc is produced, and the arms are water-cooled in closed circuit. The arms and electrodes are interchangeable to vary spot size and form across different types of weld.