Hot Sale for 22641-T Swaged Hose Fiting for Hyderabad Factory

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 45° BSP O’RING FEMALE  60° CONE    PART NUMBER HOSE THREAD    T B mm L mm A mm M mm H2 mm   DN In SIZE             S226C1 – 04 – 04OR 6 1/4″ 04 1/4″ – 19 4 35,2 5,2 14,7 19 S226C1 – 06 – 06OR 10 3/8″ 06 3/8″ – 19 7 40,9 6 17,3 22 S226C1 – 08 – 08OR 12 1/2″ 08 1/2″ – 14 9,3 47,6 6,5 19,9 27 S226C2 – 10 – 10OR 16 5/8″ 10 5/8″ – 14 12 56,8 ...


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As a way to present you with ease and enlarge our enterprise, we also have inspectors in QC Workforce and assure you our greatest support and solution for Hydraulic Fitting Kit Nsn, Split Flange Bolt Torque, Hydraulic Hose Fitting Guide, Because we stay in this line about 10 years. We got best suppliers support on quality and price. And we had weed out suppliers with poor quality. Now many OEM factories cooperated with us too.
Hot Sale for 22641-T Swaged Hose Fiting for Hyderabad Factory Detail:

 45° BSP O’RING FEMALE  60° CONE 

11

 

PART NUMBER

HOSE

THREAD

   T

B

mm

L

mm

A

mm

M

mm

H2

mm

 

DN

In

SIZE

 

 

 

 

 

 

S226C1 – 04 – 04OR 6 1/4″ 04 1/4″ – 19 4 35,2 5,2 14,7 19
S226C1 – 06 – 06OR 10 3/8″ 06 3/8″ – 19 7 40,9 6 17,3 22
S226C1 – 08 – 08OR 12 1/2″ 08 1/2″ – 14 9,3 47,6 6,5 19,9 27
S226C2 – 10 – 10OR 16 5/8″ 10 5/8″ – 14 12 56,8 9,7 25,8 30
S226C2 – 12 – 12OR 20 3/4″ 12 3/4″ – 14 15 67,8 9 30,3 32
S226C2 – 16 – 16OR 25 1″ 16 1″ – 11 19,5 84,4 10,5 37,4 38
S226C2 – 16 – 20OR 25 1″ 16 1.1/4″ – 11 26 90,1 10,1 41,6 50
S226C2 – 20 – 20OR 32 1.1/4″ 20 1.1/4″ – 11 26 100,7 10,1 44,8 50
S226C2 – 20 – 24OR 32 1.1/4″ 20 1.1/2″ – 11 32 101,3 12,5 45,5 55
S226C2 – 24 – 24OR 40 1.1/2″ 24 1.1/2″ – 11 32 112,5 12,5 49 55
S226C2 – 24 – 32OR 40 1.1/2″ 24 2″ – 11 42 116 16,1 52,5 70
S226C2 – 32 – 32OR 50 2″ 32 2″ – 11 42 132,9 16,1 55,7 70

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  • From https://www.kevincaron.com – Artist Kevin Caron shares how to fill a gap – and why you really shouldn’t ….

    Caron first addresses why you should avoid gaps altogether. It’s always better to make sure your fit is right, with straight lines, smooth cuts and tight joints, getting your fit up and prep done first. He explains that a tight fit leads to a good weld structurally. That’s not as important, perhaps, with something like art, but if you are building buildings or bridges, for example, it has to be a good joint. The weld will be X-rayed and inspected for soundness, porosity, gaps, etc. The space in a gap lets air come up and cause porosity because you’re super-heating the air above and below the gap and have a puddle of molten metal that pulls the air up through the gap and into the weld. By not having a good, tight joint, you’re causing more problems for yourself. Caron says a good fit is just part of being a good welder.

    Regardless, Caron shows you how to fill a gap. He sets up two pieces of 1/4″ plate with a V-gap, with one end fairly close and the other end wide. Again, he emphasizes that this is for aesthetic, not structural welding.

    Using Longevity’s ProMTS 200 because he loves the MIG welder in it, Caron first gives the metal a few tacks so the steel won’t move. Next he’s ready to run a welding bead. He’s got the MIG welder set at 23 volts for weld tacking, so he’s going to turn it down a little to 21.5, but leave the wire feed as it is at 147. Caron reminds us that, with this machine, that doesn’t mean 147 inches a minute (he’s not sure how Longevity measures wire speed), but it’s about two-thirds of the way up.

    Before Caron starts welding, though, he addresses whether you can just run your bead from one end to the other. He explains he wouldn’t. Because of the gap, he’s found that if you try to just run a bead from one end to the other, one piece of metal will move away as you are welding, so the gap actually widens. Caron says it’s best to tack it on one end, tack it on the other, then he likes to hopscotch back and forth. He’ll tack it in the middle, then run a short bead between two of the tacks, then go to another area and run a bead between two other tacks, etc., just filling it in as he works his way out. That helps spread out the heat more evenly and reduces warpage on thinner metals as well as prevents blow-outs. Caron then runs the bead.

    He says that that voltage worked well as he filled in the sections between the tacks. He also wove back and forth to fill in larger areas, “stealing” a little metal from each side of the gap. Then Caron shows the first weld at 21.5 volts and another at 21.2. From the back you can see that both welds got good penetration all the way through.

    A couple of other ways to fill gaps include straightening a coathanger and laying it inside the gap, getting a piece of thick copper -1/8″ or 1/4″ preferred – and using it as a backer because the steel won’t stick to the copper. You can clamp or prop the copper, which gives the molten steel something to run up against as you are welding. Depending upon your design, you could even back it with another piece of steel and just weld it in.

    For more how-to videos, visit https://www.kevincaron.com

    Goods just received, we are very satisfied, a very good supplier, hope to make persistent efforts to do better.
    5 Stars By Roberta from moldova - 2018.12.05 13:53
    The customer service staff's answer is very meticulous, the most important is that the product quality is very good, and packaged carefully, shipped quickly!
    5 Stars By Heloise from Uganda - 2018.10.09 19:07

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