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분류2 - - | Plasma Cutting Explained: What to Consider Before You Invest

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작성자 Bernard 작성일26-07-17 08:15 조회2회 댓글0건

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Cutting capacity is usually described in terms of clean cut and maximum cut thickness, and the two are worth distinguishing. Clean cut is the thickness a machine handles with a good edge finish and reasonable speed, while maximum cut is the thickest material the machine will get through at all, usually slower and with a rougher edge. Buying with your typical material thickness in mind, rather than the thickest job you might occasionally face, generally gives a better day-to-day result.

A gas lens sits in place of the standard collet body and uses a fine mesh to straighten the shielding gas flow into a smoother, more laminar stream around the arc. This generally allows a longer stick-out from the cup without turbulence pulling in surrounding air, which is particularly useful when working in tighter joints or awkward positions where the torch needs to sit further back from the work.

Buying a first welder is easy to overthink. Rather than starting from a shortlist of machines, it helps to start from the work: what materials, what thickness, and how much of it will be done indoors versus outside or on-site. That single question narrows the choice between MIG, TIG and MMA far more usefully than comparing spec sheets in isolation, whether you end up looking at a Jasic entry-level MIG package or something further up the range.

Plasma cutting uses a jet of ionised gas, usually compressed air, forced through a nozzle at high speed and heated by an electric arc to a temperature hot enough to melt through electrically conductive metal. The molten material is then blown clear by the same jet, leaving a narrow, clean cut. Unlike oxy-fuel cutting, plasma works on any conductive metal, including stainless steel and aluminium, not just carbon steel. Hypertherm is the plasma cutting brand we get asked about most, and it's worth understanding the basics before comparing specific units.

Getting the right disc for the material and finish you're after saves both abrasives and time, and it's worth checking your current selection against the job list with a supplier who stocks a full abrasives range, such as welding tables.

MIG (metal inert gas) welding feeds a continuous wire electrode through a gun, shielded by a gas supply, which makes it fast and relatively forgiving for general fabrication, sheet steel and repair work. Jasic's MIG range is one of the more popular starting points here, covering entry-level compact units through to higher-output machines as work scales up. TIG (tungsten inert gas) uses a non-consumable tungsten electrode with a separate filler rod, giving a slower but tidier result that's favoured for thinner materials, aluminium and stainless steel where finish quality matters. MMA, or stick welding, strikes an arc from a flux-coated electrode and needs no shielding gas at all, which makes it the most portable option and a common choice for outdoor or on-site work on thicker steel.

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