Settings troubleshooting workflow

I’m changing the dial on the plasma cutter. Started at 45, then did a cut at 40, etc.

Those are amperage settings.

With quarter inch aluminum you’re going to want to leave it at 45 amps.

Amperage is the amount of current or the amount of electrons flowing.

Voltage is the potential difference between two points.

We measure the voltage of the circuit with the torch height control circuit to help us keep a consistent height.

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Thanks! Sorry for the confusion.

So, causes for an abundance of slag:

  1. plasma blockage
  2. not dry air

Things I was thinking may impact it:

  1. slow cutting speed
  2. water table too high
  3. air pressure too low

What can I move into the “causes” list?

Thank you again!

Well what could cause it.

Cut height being too high or low.

Too short of a pierce delay and not piercing all the the material before you start traveling.

Too low amps.

Too fast or slow travel speed.

Wet air.

Deformed or blocked consumables.

Torch height control not maintaining the correct height.

Air pressure set too low or high.

Not attaching the material clamp to your workpiece.

Any one of these or a combination of these could lead to poor cuts

I’m not sure about the water table height I just fill mine till it’s almost overflowing.

What are you doing currently to dry your air?

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Thank you Tin!

I do not have an air drying solution. Recommendations?

In my case I have a active pipe cooler after my compressor.

Then it moves into a refrigerated air dryer.

Then I have a desiccant cell.

Then a dryer storage tank.

Then off to the plasma torch.

My recommendation is try to maintain this air standard.

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Again, thank you. As someone brand new to this hobbie I’m very thankful for the guidance. Do you think this would be a good starter setup to deliver dry air to the torch?

  1. air compressor
  2. 3 Stage Air Drying System
  3. Water Oil Separator

Here are links:

I have this desiccant dryer it’s worked well for me.
https://www.summitracing.com/parts/dvr-130525?seid=srese1&gclid=CjwKCAjwi8iXBhBeEiwAKbUofZjVyRPLHArD9F4lWfi_98abc2D9nj_p__m_F3cf4xfrF9MYcG0ViRoCW6YQAvD_BwE

Every other heavy use I change out the cartridge and repack it with fresh beads. This is maybe a little excessive.

But since I’ve bought in mine Eastwood rebrands this same at a reduced cost.

You’re going to want to cool off the air as much as possible before it reaches the desiccant cell and have a drip tee before the desiccant cell as well.

I would have the desiccant cell is close to the plasma as you can mainly to give the air as much chance to cool as possible.

I would stay away from anything with a quarter inch fitting.

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@TinWhisperer from what I read we have a similar setup minus beads do you see yours changing colors often? I have yet to see moisture in my dry air tank. Just curious

Originally that desiccant cell did not come with color changing beads but I had changed the beads out of both the cartridges I have to the blue color change version of beads.

So as the air flows into this cartridge it hits the centrifugal fin style water separator at the top then the air comes in the bottom of the cartridge and the air flows from the bottom up and then out the top and towards the plasma cutter.

So even when you open the canister the top beads will look blue but if you dump it out they’ll be pink at the bottom.

I have two of these internal cartridges that I switch out every other time I do a heavy cut session.

I’ll pop open those internal cartridges and dump the beads onto a cookie sheet and bake them in the oven and then return them back to the cartridge and then put the cartridge in a ziplock bag till I need it.

I don’t see moisture in my dry tank either.

The water vapor that doesn’t condense but still moves through the equipment is the invisible threat to our equipment.

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Right and I agree was just curious. Just my way of thinking I would see at least a drop of moisture. I use my powder coating gun for hours at a time including blast cabinet with the table.

Not sure for curiosity sake I may have to put mine back in line to see how much they catch.

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Would this copper pipe system work for cooling and water removal?

Most people put a valve at the bottom of each leg. the air needs to travel through each leg without bypassing any. I used 2 transmission coolers with af an for reach. I would consider the cost each way.

An autodrain on the low side will automatically empty it.

@Phillipw I don’t think his extra bridges will be a problem, most of the useful separation will be on the vertical tubes, but they are redundant, ISTM…

If the piping is properly size I feel like it would just bypass most of the volume of this radiator.

Why wouldn’t it take the easiest line of resistance?

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Forget that and just put a transmission cooler on the compressor.

I get way more water out of the separator on the transmission cooler in a single compressor cycle, than all the water I’ve ever drained from my 60’ copper manifold.

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I put one cooler between pump and tank. Then did one between tank and refrigerated dryer. Cost for me here was cheaper and in my opinion looks better than copper pipe on the wall.

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Doh! That’s one of the many reasons I don’t work in HVAC or Plumbing! :thinking:

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gotcha! Thank you Tin!

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An after cooler on the compressor will drop it 100 degrees immediately and pull a lot of moisture out very quickly.

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