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Tilt on Argon Mix bottle

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  • Tilt on Argon Mix bottle

    My recycled Welder cart is actually a gas bottle dolly. You lift the cart to load the bottle and then lay it back on the wheels to roll it around. It holds the bottle at around a 45-degree angle. I welded a bracket to the bottom and it holds my mig on the bottom with the bottle at the angle. Is there any problem with this?

    I used to have the bottle chained to the wall before this cart and have not seen any change in performance since I moved it to the cart.
    Robert

    Snap-on (Century) 110 Mig
    Ridgid Chop Saw
    Makita 4" Grinder
    Quite a collection of scrap

    Functional Stuff is painted, my art rusts.

    The greatest lesson in life is to know that even fools are right sometimes. - Winston Chruchill

  • #2
    Leaning a tank of Argon or C25 is no problem....it's acetylene you don't want to lean.

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    • #3
      No problem. The only time there is a problem is when there is liquid involved, which would be a liquid CO2, liquid O2, acetylene (the acetylene is dissolved in acetone), etc.
      I may not be good looking, but I make up for it with my dazzling lack of personality

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      • #4
        There's been discussion on gas/CO² mixes, but I have never had any difficulty with my C-25. There is a belief that the CO² can return to liquid state under the right conditions, but I haven't had it happen to me yet!

        Certainly, 45° is no problem!

        Hank
        Last edited by hankj; 10-15-2007, 04:19 PM.
        ...from the Gadget Garage
        MM 210 w/3035, BWE
        HH 210 w/DP 3035
        TA185TSW
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        Avatar courtesy of Bob Sigmon...

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        • #5
          Man, am I glad to hear that. I may even have to post a picture of my recycled welder cart now.
          Robert

          Snap-on (Century) 110 Mig
          Ridgid Chop Saw
          Makita 4" Grinder
          Quite a collection of scrap

          Functional Stuff is painted, my art rusts.

          The greatest lesson in life is to know that even fools are right sometimes. - Winston Chruchill

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          • #6
            Originally posted by hankj View Post
            There is a belief that the CO² can return to liquid state under the right conditions, but I haven't had it happen to me yet!
            For the CO2 to go to liquid requires temperatures lower than most people are ever going to see while welding. Even in the parts of Canada or Alaska where the temp drops to this point, I doubt it is often an issue, as anywhere where the mix is critical, the gas supply won't be that cold.

            What temp?

            From the phase diagram (http://scifun.chem.wisc.edu/chemweek...se_diagram.gif) we see that at 35ATM (approx 500PSI, approx the partial pressure of CO2 in a full bottle of C25 at -10 deg C), the temp needs to be about -10 deg C (about 10F) for liquid to begin to form. Liquification would stop as soon as the partial pressure of the CO2 drops. As the pressure in the bottle drops during use, the temperature also drops fairly rapidly.
            I may not be good looking, but I make up for it with my dazzling lack of personality

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            • #7
              ALL my tanks, eccept for CO2, and LP are almost horizontal. No problems, and everything is honky dory. I have frozen CO2 and LP tanks running dualshield, and a big rosebud/scrap tip. Mixed gas is just that gas, no liquid, dont worry about it.
              "Weld It And You Won't Be Screwed"
              Rescued from the boneyard SA-250 on a fully equipt trailer (My Wife's Explorer cries every time I hitch up)
              Trailblazer 301G (can't touch the SA-200 for stick)
              Arcair K-4000 A.K.A "The Hissing Cobra"
              HF- 251 TIG box for the TB with a Weldcrap torch, Yes I weld aluminum
              More than a toolbox full of stuff on an F-350 that is way to small

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