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What Gauge Of Steel Is Good To Repair Wood Boiler

  1. All-time rod and canvas steel for a wood stove

    I am trying to effigy out what the best grade of canvas steel would exist to repair my woodsove and the all-time rod to use in guild to take the abuse of heating? thanks

  2. Re: Best rod and canvas steel for a wood stove

    Is the woodstove made from Cast Iron ?

    Weldandpower Lincoln 225 Ac,DC with Briggs 16hp gas engine.
    WW2 era Miller TIG.


  3. Re: Best rod and canvas steel for a forest stove

    No It is made from steel and is an add-on blazon stove. I really like the stove and I have some mild abilites to weld. I take a old Lincoln Ac 225. I accept looked into some prices for a canvass of 4x10 steel but of course the company will not comment on its ability to withstand heat. Thanks for the help.

  4. Re: Best rod and sheet steel for a wood stove

    What exactly do Y'all mean by ' withstand oestrus ' ?
    Show us pictures of the identify that needs to be repaired.
    Is information technology in a place which is going to show ? Or does information technology just need to last ?
    What caused the ' injury ' in the start identify ? How big is this repair piece needing to exist ? Does it need to 'take' paint afterward yous repair it ?

    Weldandpower Lincoln 225 AC,DC with Briggs 16hp gas engine.
    WW2 era Miller TIG.


  5. Re: Best rod and sheet steel for a wood stove

    A lot of this would depend on how thick the steel is and where it's used in the stove. I've seen thin steel oil drums used successfully for years equally a stove. The shape helps prevent warping, and as long every bit the steel isn't in direct contact with the coals they ordinarily hold up. If you lot are edifice from scratch, heavier normally is better as far as steel is concerned with this.

    Picts of what you need to do would assistance as well as more info on the thickness of the material.

    Every bit far equally skilful rods, my guess is any 70XX rod would be good, and even 6011 or 6013 would practice what you need. Personally I'd suggest 3/32" 7014 because of how piece of cake it is to use and the fact information technology stores improve in the long run. I'll assume the thickness of the original stove is nearly 1/8" or less, then I'd run 3/32" or smaller rods. if it's thicker steel, then 3/32" or i/8" rod instead.

    .

    No authorities ever voluntarily reduces itself in size. Government programs, once launched, never disappear. Actually, a regime bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this world!

    Ronald Reagan


  6. Re: All-time rod and sheet steel for a wood stove

    All I am trying to do is resheet the existing stove. It is non to the point that it has a hole in it and in that location are no cracks. notwithstanding, information technology is quite warped and for a few hundred dollars I could get in as expert as new. What I was thinking of doing is wrapping the outside of the firebox with some lite gauge xviii - 22 gauge steel mostly because the firebox is half circular and information technology is easier to handle the liter material. My question pertains to specific properties of steel and if there is a certain chemical make-up that would survive the abuses that a forest stove puts along. I am on vacation and could transport pictures side by side week I have to. I have heard balmy steels are better? what is meant by a mild steel? Thanks.

  7. Re: All-time rod and sheet steel for a wood stove

    Quote Originally Posted by brent.i.williams View Post

    All I am trying to practice is resheet the existing stove. It is non to the betoken that it has a hole in it and there are no cracks. nonetheless, it is quite warped and for a few hundred dollars I could make it equally good equally new. What I was thinking of doing is wrapping the outside of the firebox with some calorie-free judge 18 - 22 gauge steel generally because the firebox is one-half circular and it is easier to handle the liter cloth. My question pertains to specific properties of steel and if there is a certain chemical make-up that would survive the abuses that a wood stove puts forth. I am on vacation and could send pictures side by side week I take to. I take heard mild steels are better? what is meant by a mild steel? Thanks.

    just phone call insurance company now for your firm fire...so you want to comprehend the warped steel that volition soon fissure with thin metal to cosmetically brand information technology wait nice..sounds similar the stove NEEDS tobe replaced every bit someone over fired it and warped the steel. as the steel warps it looses strength and Will crack..do yourself a favor either hav the stove looked at by a professional person or make a planter out of it...I understand the want to fix and keep something going merely sometimes we have to bite the bullet and scrap it for saftey reasons..

    Of all the things I lost I miss my listen the nearly...
    I know only enough about everything to be dangerous......
    Y'all cant cure stupid..simply impale it...


  8. Re: Best rod and sheet steel for a wood stove

    I similar DSW's answer but if y'all ain't buying that, my all-time estimate would be A36.

    Good luck.

    Ship pix.


  9. Re: Best rod and sheet steel for a wood stove

    Quote Originally Posted past brent.i.williams View Post

    What I was thinking of doing is wrapping the outside of the firebox with some calorie-free estimate 18 - 22 gauge steel mostly because the firebox is half circular and it is easier to handle the liter material.

    If you lot tin stick weld 18 -22 ga you're a better stick welder than I am. I'd guess you'd need to probably apply 6010/11 to accomplish this. I know a few here that could practise and so, but not many. Mig would be a improve choice for material this thin. If my merely choice was stick, the thinest I'd be looking at using was i/viii" most likely, possibly 14 ga.

    I seriously doubt material this thin would hold upwards well in use, particularly if you've already managed to warp the stoves existing metal.

    Quote Originally Posted by brent.i.williams View Post

    All I am trying to do is resheet the existing stove. It is not to the point that information technology has a pigsty in it and there are no cracks. however, it is quite warped and for a few hundred dollars I could make it equally adept equally new.

    For a few hundred, I could probably rebuild the stove from scratch depending on the original blueprint. Over again picts would assistance. I might wait at having my metallic supplier roll heavier sail, say 3/16", or take a friend I know with a large break, bump me some 1/2 sections I could assemble together. If nada else it would expect ameliorate than your attempt to bend thinner material yourself if you lot don't have the right tools. Defective the tools to bend it, I'd expect at making a rectangular burn down box out of heavier steel, say i/4" or more than and redesign the unit.

    .

    No authorities e'er voluntarily reduces itself in size. Regime programs, one time launched, never disappear. Actually, a authorities bureau is the nearest matter to eternal life nosotros'll ever run across on this earth!

    Ronald Reagan


  10. Re: Best rod and sheet steel for a wood stove

    Steel melts at 1600 degrees, but thinner steel takes less heat to reach the melting betoken. Warping happens before it reaches the melting point though. 1/eight" would be thin for a fire box methinks. But I commonly overbuild.

    I have a cast iron stove that had broken in one-half along one wall. It was broke before I ever got it, but I have plans to weld it back together when my round-tuit arrives. I considered brazing, but...I'll prolly become for welding.

    City of Fifty.A. Structural; Manual & Semi-Automatic;

    "Surely at that place is a mine for silvery, and a identify where gold is refined. Iron is taken from the earth, and copper is smelted from ore."
    Job 28:1,2
    Lincoln, Miller, Victor & ISV Bible

    Danny


  11. Re: Best rod and sheet steel for a wood stove

    Quote Originally Posted by tanglediver View Post

    Steel melts at 1600 degrees

    Really?

    Celsius or Kelvin?

    I always heard steel melted at 2,500 to ii,700 F (or 1,360 to ane,460 C).

    At present, if information technology'south contumely y'all're talking near ...


  12. Re: Best rod and canvass steel for a wood stove

    Heck, just use titanium, It handles thermal stresses very well!

    6 Miller Big Blue 600 Air Paks
    2 Miller 400D
    6 Lincoln LN-25's
    4 Miller Xtreme 12VS
    2 Miller Dimension 812
    4 Climax BW-3000Z bore welders
    Hypertherm 65 and 85
    Problems-O Rail Bug
    Pair of Welpers


  13. Re: Best rod and sail steel for a woods stove

    Quote Originally Posted past tanglediver View Post

    Steel melts at 1600 degrees, but thinner steel takes less heat to accomplish the melting indicate. Warping happens earlier information technology reaches the melting point though. 1/8" would be thin for a burn box methinks. But I usually overbuild.

    I have a cast iron stove that had broken in one-half along one wall. Information technology was broke before I e'er got information technology, simply I have plans to weld it back together when my round-tuit arrives. I considered brazing, but...I'll prolly get for welding.

    You lot surely are talking Celsius right?? I always figured mild steel melted around 26-2700 degrees Farenheight, around 1500 Celsius?

    half dozen Miller Big Blue 600 Air Paks
    2 Miller 400D
    6 Lincoln LN-25's
    4 Miller Xtreme 12VS
    2 Miller Dimension 812
    4 Climax BW-3000Z bore welders
    Hypertherm 65 and 85
    Issues-O Rails Problems
    Pair of Welpers


What Gauge Of Steel Is Good To Repair Wood Boiler,

Source: https://weldingweb.com/vbb/threads/59873-Best-rod-and-sheet-steel-for-a-wood-stove

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