How to Seamlessly Join Two Pieces of Pipe – Kevin Caron
From http://www.kevincaron.com – Artist Kevin Caron shows how to seamlessly weld together two pieces of metal pipe, rod or square tubing ….
Sometimes you are working on a project – making a fence, a cage, whatever – and your pipe or rod is a little short, so you want to add a piece of scrap to get your correct length and have a smooth piece of pipe. To show you how to join them to make a single piece of metal pipe or rod, Caron starts by taking two lengths of metal pipe over to his chopsaw. But before he puts his stock into the saw, he uses his framing square to check against the backstop and the blade to make sure the chopsaw is set at 90 degrees before he makes his cut. Once that’s confirmed, he secures the stock. Caron emphasizes, though, that when you put your stock into the chopsaw, you don’t have to crush it – just make sure it’s snug. He puts on his safety glasses and hearing protection, then cuts off the ends of both of the pieces he is going to join to get a clean, straight area. Next he goes over to his bench grinder, which he’s modified so he can add a 4-1/2″ soft pad – which he usually uses on his hand-held angle grinder – on the outside of the grinding wheel. He dresses the edge of each pipe, giving it a nice chamfer, or bevel, and touches the flat end of the pipe to remove any burrs so it will jig up neatly. He lays both pieces of pipe on a piece of thick-walled angle iron, which gives him a straight 90-degree edge – the angle iron is great for square tubing and pipe. Everything fits together and lines up so he can weld down into the joint. He has a good kerf that gives ample penetration while allowing him to grind the welded joint smooth and flush. Next he clamps down each pipe with a Kantwist clamp, which has an X in its bottom pad that lets you lock everything in place. Because it’s a tiny joint, Caron uses 1/16″ E3 tungsten sharpened almost to a point and some 1/16″ filler rod in his TIG welder. Caron then tacks both sides of the pipe because a single tack on the top can result in a bow. Then he welds a small tack on the top, rolls the pipe over, reclamps it, and gets a tack on the other side. So now he has tacked it on all four “corners.” Then he welds between the tacks. When the welding is done, he lets the pipe cool down a minute or two, then uses his 4-1/2″ angle grinder with a soft pad to smooth the surface. Caron checks his work with a straight edge, looking for light between the pipe and the straight edge. Finally, he can finish the job with some 80 grit and some 120 grit with long passes to hide the weld. For more how-to videos, visit http://www.kevincaron.com
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I have a question that is very similar to that question.
I want to build my own 8'x30' trailer for hauling produce from the farm or Farmers Market where purchase it to wherever I plan to sell it. The longest 4" x 2" Carbon Steel Rectangular Tubing I can find is 6 ft. long. I want to add 5 together end-to-end to make a trailer that is 30' long. How can I connect them and make it strong enough to hold the weight without braking at the connected ends?
what if the pipe is under a bending load, your method near the end of a pipe as you said (you are a couple of inch short) is under shear load more than bending. Would you use a spline similar tube with an OD to match the ID, how would you do this? I have to add 6" to a central section of some 2"OD .120 wall tube.
I'm new to using a mig welder. I think he is using a tig welder. Can someone explain how he's welding? Like, what is the thing that is glowing? Is it the tungsten wire or the electrode(if there is an electrode)? Any extra info would be appreciated. Thank you
How to join a 50mm diameter pipe 4m long in the middle with a mirror finish? That is the real question
Great vid man , well done . Love your bench grinder mods
Cheers man.
I love watching your videos. thanks
best practice aside, if someone put a gun to your head.. could this be achieved with MIG?
nice demo