Mobile Micro Welding Services
Mobile Micro TIG Welding
Mobile Micro TIG Welding (Pulse Arc welding) is a microscopic process for welding parts that cannot be welded with normal TIG welding. Due to heat input and warping, undergoing normal TIG welding is not applicable. With our state of the art machinary and specialized equipment, capable of dropping to 1/10 of an amp with a stable arc, Micro TIG welding uses filler wires ranging from .005" to .035". With this process, intricate welds can be preformed while depositing very precise amounts of weld material. Subsequently, allowing weld buildups to occur which can be as small as .005".
Pulse Arc Welding Mobile Micro Tig Welder
Mobile Micro TIG welding (Pulse Arc welding) is a zero-contact controlled welding process for welding parts that cannot be welded with normal TIG welding due to heat input and warping. The process involves the electrical arc being struck between an electrode and the target component.
The arc generates very high and concentrated energy density, resulting in high local temperatures that can be used for welding. As the name implies, it is performed under a microscope.
In mobile micro TIG welding, specialized power supplies are used due to their ability to go down to 1/10 of an amp with a stable arc. Mobile micro TIG welding also utilizes filler wires ranging from .005" to .035". Intricate welds can be preformed with this process while depositing very precise amounts of weld material. Weld buildups can be as small as .005".
This versatile welder can cover industries such as Aerospace, Automotive, Battery, Dental, Electronics, Filtration, Heating/Cooling, Hobby, Industrial, Jewelry, Military, Medical Devices, Plastics, R&D, and much more.
Mold & Die Repair
Tool and die welding repair with TIG welding is a specialty niche critical to the maintenance and repair of tools, dies, molds and inserts. The TIG process is used in die welding because operators can finely control the amount and location of deposited weld metal well as heat input. Tool and die welding typically involves building a damaged or over-machined surface up past its original plane so that it can be machined back to its original tolerances.