I bought some thermocouples that were not welded on the end. Is there
something I need to do to these wires other than just weld them together
with a torch and some flux? Is there any kind of a trick to the process?
Thermocouple question
Moderators: Brad Walker, Tony Smith
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Depending on what wire size you have, you can do one of several things. For small wires you can twist them together several turns, add the flux and then weld. For large wires like 8 gage, prebend the wires to their final shape and butt the ends together. Make sure you have good square contact at the ends. If your setup uses ceramic "fish spines" (short tubes) to protect the wires inside the kiln, you can use them to hold the wires together while you weld. You can also clamp them down on a workbench and let the tips hang over edge for welding.
The welds are fairly strong, but they don't like a lot of bending. You can file the weld bead to shape it if you want.
Ron
The welds are fairly strong, but they don't like a lot of bending. You can file the weld bead to shape it if you want.
Ron
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Re: Thermocouple question
The weld is the business end of the thermocouple, along with the exact length of the wires. I wouldn't trust my glass work to a homemade thermocouple. Why risk thousands of dollars worth of work when you can get a good professional thermocouple for $55. I just looked on the Digitry site and they sell a Type K (9" long, Inconel stainless steel sheathed, magnesium oxide packed) for $55. I have been using similar ones for 13 years now. The interesting thing is that the drift is not so much that my glass doesn't anneal just right after all these years. Your exposed home made rig won't last long.Bruce wrote:I bought some thermocouples that were not welded on the end. Is there
something I need to do to these wires other than just weld them together
with a torch and some flux? Is there any kind of a trick to the process?
Bert
Bert Weiss Art Glass*
http://www.customartglass.com
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Bert Weiss Art Glass*
http://www.customartglass.com
Furniture Lighting Sculpture Tableware
Architectural Commissions
thermocouples
I agree with Bert. You might have purchased just thermocouple wire not thermocouples. The weld opens up or breaks during a run it might be bad news.
BobB
BobB
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I agree with BobB and Bert. Go to the Omega website. For $10 you can buy an 8 gauge K-type thermocouple factory welded and tested with 12" leads... $8 for the 14 gauge thermocouple. Or you can get any insulator/length/gauge configuration you like. Omega is the largest manufacturer of thermocouples in the US (and not imported). All of their thermocouples and wire are manufactured in New Jersey to order. Their service is excellent and they are ISO 9001 certified.
http://www.omega.com/toc_asp/frameset.h ... BARE_FS_OV
Tony
http://www.omega.com/toc_asp/frameset.h ... BARE_FS_OV
Tony
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