Application Recommendations for Tubular Rods and Electrodes – Hardfacing
AgroCrom / AgroTung
OXI-ACETYLENE APPLICATION GUIDE
The self-shielded alloy has a melting point of approximately 1050 °C, making it suitable for application with an oxy-acetylene torch.
Required Equipment
- Acetylene and Oxygen cylinders with pressure regulators
- Oxygen: 4 bar
- Acetylene: 0.8 bar
- Torch tips (approximate consumption / diameter):
- Tip No. 3: 600 L/h – Ø 1.75 mm
- Tip No. 4: 1000 L/h – Ø 2.20 mm
- Tip No. 5: 2000 L/h – Ø 3.00 mm
1. Surface Preparation
- Remove rust, dirt, grease, oil, and other contaminants from the surface to be welded.
- Remove any previous hardfacing if:
- The materials are unknown or incompatible
- There is porosity, cracking, deformation, or work hardening due to impact
- Removal should be done by grinding. Repair the part if necessary.
- A good base is essential—remove fatigued material, protrusions, or surface irregularities.
- Cracks in the base metal must be ground out to reach solid material; drill the ends of the crack and fill with a compatible electrode.
- If the surface has been subjected to impact, remove ~3 mm before rebuilding and hardfacing.
- Poor base metal preparation can lead to weld detachment.
If the base metal is unknown or contains harmful elements (e.g., high sulfur):
Clean the surface and apply a buttering/intermediate layer using a basic low-alloy electrode (e.g., AWS E-7018) before hardfacing.
Preparation is even more critical when using a torch.
2. Preheating the Surface
Before hardfacing, the welder should assess the part’s size, shape, properties, and usage.
Recommendations:
- Manganese steels: Preheat to 100 °C but never exceed 260 °C.
Higher temperatures (preheat or interpass) may cause manganese carbides to form along austenitic grain boundaries, reducing hardness. - Cast iron: Requires high preheat temperatures.
A practical method is heating the part until it reaches a dull red glow. - Carbon and low-alloy steels:
Preheating may be necessary to prevent cracking in the base metal or under the bead.
3. Hardfacing Procedure
- Use excess acetylene for torch hardfacing. The outer flame should be three times the length of the inner cone.
- A carburizing flame reduces surface melting temperature and protects the base metal from oxidation.
This is known as the “3X flame” (outer feather = 3× cone size). - Use torch tips from No. 3 to No. 6 depending on rod diameter and part size.
Nickel-based alloys require a neutral flame. - Heat the surface until it “sweats” (intense red glow), indicating fusion is starting.
The flame should strike the part at a 45° angle, and the rod should approach from the opposite side, also at 45°. - Keep the flame oscillating side to side.
Do not remove the rod tip during fusion.
Adjust according to desired coating thickness for maximum wear resistance.
Welding Position & Bead Direction:
- Horizontal position
- Downward direction at 15° = thinner deposit
- Upward direction at 15° = thicker deposit
Deposit Thickness:
Avoid excessive deposit thickness—it may crack or detach in service.
If high thickness is required, use proper rebuilding material first to reach the needed dimensions.
Rod preheating:
Preheat rods for at least one hour at 100 °C to eliminate moisture and avoid porosity.
Deformation:
Heat may deform parts.
Use proper clamping and alternate bead placement to avoid overheating specific areas.
4. Cooling / Postheating
This method offers excellent dilution control due to the lower flame temperature compared to arc welding, allowing precise fusion and base metal preheat.
Cooling Procedures:
- Austenitic steels: Minimal interpass temperature needed; cooling is not critical.
- Martensitic steels: The goal is full martensite formation.
- Cool the part in air to ~120 °C from welding temperature.
- Maintain the part at 120 °C for 2–3 hours to allow hydrogen to escape and avoid embrittlement.
Postheating
Postheating generally refers to stress relief and tempering.
Performed below critical temperature of the filler material.
- Typical postheat: 450–650 °C
- Time: Approx. 1 hour per 2 cm of part thickness
- May cause slight hardness drop (1–3 HRC), or in some cases increase it due to secondary hardening, often seen during low-temperature tempering.
IMPORTANT SAFETY NOTICE
Fumes from normal use of these products may contain chromium, manganese, and tungsten carbides, which can be hazardous.
FLAME SETTINGS
- Short flame, oxygen excess → ❌ Not recommended
- Very long flame, oxygen deficiency → ❌ Not recommended
- Short flame, acetylene excess → ✅ Recommended, prevents oxidation
