Does anyone know of a good company/person that can weld cast iron in Ottawa?
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Does anyone know of a good company/person that can weld cast iron in Ottawa?
"Cast iron welding - Ottawa" If you had put that in google, you would come up with the below and wouldn't have had to type the sentence.
https://www.mazeweld.com/services/lo...ding-in-ottawa
Was looking for a recommendation rather than some random link on Google, which I could find myself.
I have bought steel from Dundas in Winchester and had them bend a axle back into shape. A buddy of mine has had some welding done by them. They also sold me some mig parts at less then the dealer.
http://www.dundasmachine.ca/
Out of curiosity.... what do you need welded? In a lot of applications, cast iron welding is a relatively short term repair.
Cast Iron should be brazed and not welded
Cast iron is very brittle, anything that endures repeated heat cycles such as an exhaust manifold, or certain parts of a wood stove will likely Crack again.
Obviously it's better than scrapping something irreplaceable, I was only curious if it would be a worthwhile cost vs longevity if it was something able to be purchased.
If it's a leg or an ornamental part it will probably be fine, brazing is usually better for sealing or repairing cracks because it is far more ductile than the casting so it won't Crack like weld.
Is it a small part. Preheat is easiest. Small part could be prepped and put in a wood stove bring it out weld it then returned to the stove coals. To cool slow
Braze or arc weld it it’ll likely fail again if it could be pinned success would be better
Ain’t Gona be cheap you could have beautiful repair and thats peaned out and it rebreak or luck may be on your side.
But stove if it can’t be pinned failure could be stove falling over?
Heat part up, tig it with the proper filler rod, cool part down slowly. Dig a hole in sand and cover.
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So when people say it may crack again, is this during the initial cooling process, or is it more likely while it is in use?
I actually had the parts welded between starting this thread and the first response. The welds look solid, but I haven't used them in the stove yet. All of the parts will be subjected to heat, but they won't cause the stove to fall over if they recrack. Parts for this stove are no longer available.
There is another part that I need to have welded, but I still have to see if I can get it off the stove.
If it’s a part of the stove that heats and cools. It will likely crack.
Is it a crack or a complete break making two parts crack should have a hole drilled at each end of it before welding this helps to stop the crack
If it’s a leg hard to tell without pictures but you may be able to build a leg out of steel and use the cast as a skirt
It was a break in the part of the grate that supports the logs as they burn. It is the sliding piece that you use to control the air flow, so it is not actually supporting the logs. I will give it a try and hopefully it will stay together.
I would just keep an eye on it. It could last forever.
I've never fixed a stove, but had to repair a lot of different things that are subject to far harsher conditions (industrial), most of them last just fine. I find cracking more common if the repair is on a part bolted to another because they expand and contract at different rates. If whoever welded it took the time to use all the usual tricks, that's the best you can do.
Ditto on Camoman. I can't comment on a stove but I've had a welder do repairs on 1930's seed drill drop tubes. What they call "dirty" low grade cast. It's just a matter of using the correct rod and doing the "cherry red" preheat properly to the right temp. He never did the sand cool-down but that's an excellent idea . I've never had any of his welds break and the drill gets the crap pounded out of it. He also does cracked engine blocks like this.
If it’s the part I’m thinking of I would think you could get one made that will work, it’s not going to last forever either but it will work for a good while
I am considering getting a couple of these important parts made - it probably wouldn't be difficult to make them for someone with the right tools. The issue would be the cost, especially considering that I have seen similar wood cookstoves on kijiji for under $500.