Welding
Non-Ferrous
Metals
Treating
Welding
Cast Iron
Welding
Ferrous
Metals
3
The key
to successful brazing is joint design. Because the process depends on capillary
attraction, the spacing
between the parts to be joined must
be small and accurately controlled. While it is possible to make a square-butt
joint (similar to that we talked about
for fusion welding steel sheet) the two edges must be very carefully prepared,
and spaced precisely, if the joint
is to be successful. Such butt joints are occasionally employed, but are
exceptions. Almost all brazed joints
can be classified as lap joints. Several examples are illustrated in Fig. 21-2.
The joint between a piece of copper
tube and a socket-type fitting is a kind of lap joint. In such a joint, the
separation between the two parts should
usually be between 0.050 mm (.002 in.) and 0.150 mm (0.006 in.) While
clearances greater than 0.150 mm can
usually be filled with brazing alloy, the joint will lose some of its strength
when subject to tensile forces.
In brazing operations, as in braze
welding, a flux is required. The purpose of the flux is to remove from the surfaces
of the parts any oxides which may remain
after thorough mechanical cleaning, or which form as the parts are being
heated to brazing temperature. The
fluxes used with silver- or copper- based brazing alloys are all based on boric
acid and other boron or flourine compounds.
They are somewhat similar to the fluxes used in braze welding, but
should not be considered interchangeable
with such fluxes. The active ingredients are dry powders which are then
mixed with a vehicle to form a paste
or thick liquid which can be readily applied to the joint surfaces. When the joint
is heated, the vehicle evaporates,
and the flux then liquefies to do its work of dissolving oxides.