Hey y'all,
Living in a smaller town can have it's drawbacks. One of them is finding all the stuff we need. Our local welding supply place only had RG45 or RG70 in the 1/16th inch copper coated welding rods. None of the Lincoln R60 at all. So the "R" in R60 means that the rod is made for gas welding. The 60 indicates 60 psi tensile strength. As best I can tell, the differences are minor. The basics that seem to matter for making coil cores are small diameter, mild steel, and copper coated. The other things present in the various numbered rods are pretty specific to things a welder who is actually going to weld with these rods would need to know.
I bought the RG45 rods, but thought to get a discussion going on possible alternatives to the Lincoln R60 rods for when folks can't get them. Also, if there is something that makes any other rods completely out of the question for our purposes, perhaps someone who knows can post their experiences with that.
Does my analysis sound correct?
Thanks,
-Woody
Living in a smaller town can have it's drawbacks. One of them is finding all the stuff we need. Our local welding supply place only had RG45 or RG70 in the 1/16th inch copper coated welding rods. None of the Lincoln R60 at all. So the "R" in R60 means that the rod is made for gas welding. The 60 indicates 60 psi tensile strength. As best I can tell, the differences are minor. The basics that seem to matter for making coil cores are small diameter, mild steel, and copper coated. The other things present in the various numbered rods are pretty specific to things a welder who is actually going to weld with these rods would need to know.
I bought the RG45 rods, but thought to get a discussion going on possible alternatives to the Lincoln R60 rods for when folks can't get them. Also, if there is something that makes any other rods completely out of the question for our purposes, perhaps someone who knows can post their experiences with that.
Does my analysis sound correct?
Thanks,
-Woody
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