Craftsman 113.201392 Owner's Manual page 11

295 amp dual range arc welder
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YOUR
WELDER
and what it will do..,
Your CRAFTSMAN Arc Welderisa sturdilyconstructed andthoroughlytestedmachineengineered to
give many years of efficient trouble-free service. It is listed by Underwriters' Laboratories,
incorporated, which meansthat it passes a ll requirements of safety, fire hazardandtemperaturerise
limits asspecified in their Standard for Transfer-Type Arc-Welding Equipment.
HOW THE CRAFTSMAN ELECTRODE
SIMPLIFIES WELDING
Craftsman
Contact
Electrode is self-starting--plusautomatic
restarting... The electrodestartson contact.
Craftsman Contact Electrode is self-cleaning ...
Under nnrmai
conditionsthe slagremoves itselfasthe weld cools.Spatter is almost
non-existent. Craftsman Contact Electrode has an exceptionally
good appearance ..,
With fine ripple, unusually clean, smooth
appearance, and reduced slaginclusions.
Craftsman Contact Electrodedeposits moremetal faster.., Because
the powdered iron in the flux goesinto the weld.
W H AT
H A P P m= N S
VHEN
YOU
WELD?
1
Beth edges of the metal
are heated by the arc,
until --
3
more molten metal and
flux is added from the
rod, which --
2
they melt and flow te-
EetherforminE one piece,
instantly--
4[ fills the crater and covers
the top of the weld with
slag.
5
This process continues the entire length of the weld,
Arc Welding is the process of fusing two or more pieces of
metal together
to form one piece. It is c=ccompiished by
heating adjacent metal surfaces to the melting point with an
electric arc, then adding
o sufficient amount of molten
metal to provide reinforcement
and fill any vacant space
between the parts being joined, as shown in the accompany-
ing illustrations.
The arc is created when an etectrlc current, regulated by
a welding transformer, flows across an air gap between an
electrode and the work being welded.
The intense heat
generated by the arc is ideally suited for welding, c=sit
can be directed to affect only the part of the metal to be
welded. Uniform heat from the arc, is acquired by keeping
its length the same for a given rod size and current setting.
At the instant an arc is "struck",
a portion
of the base
metal directly beneath it, is melted, resulting in a small
pool of molten metal, some of which is forced out by the
blast of the arc and deposited along the weld path. The
depth of the crater thus formed, is the distance the weld
will extend into the base metal and is referred to as the
penetration of the weFd.
Some of the electrode (which consists of o metal rod sur-
rounded by a flux coating)
is melted simultaneously with
the base metal and is carried by the arc to the liquid pool
This added metal combines with the base metat to form
the deposited weld.
During this operation a part of the flux coating burns off
and forms a gaseous smoke screen that completely
en-
velops the arc, protecting the molten meta_ from harmful
effects of oxygen and nitrogen in the surrounding atmos-
phere. The remainder of the flux
coating
that melts is
carried to the molten pool where it mixes with the metal
to combine with various
impurities.
It then floats to the
surfaces to form a coating of slag which covers the de-
posited weld metal, protecting it from the atmosphere and
retarding
its cooling.
_3

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