ayoung802
Mechanical
- Oct 1, 2008
- 27
In short I need to place fittings on a tank. No big deal if they weld the fittings on, then weld the tank in place followed by sandblasting and painting the inside of the steel tank.
If only things could be that easy. The sandblasters and painters are ready to get started now and the welders don't want to install the fittings until the tank is in place because of the limited space to work around. When the tank gets installed and the fittings get welded on the heat from welding will cause the paint to bubble and chip. The paint can be touched up later.
I'm sure I'm not the first one to run into this problem, has anyone attached a heat sink to the welding area to help reduce the heat? I also came across something called heat sink paste. It seems like it might help absorb the heat. Has anyone used heat sink paste before? Does it only reject a little of the weld heat or does it do a good job of rejecting a lot of heat?
Thanks in advance,
Andrew
If only things could be that easy. The sandblasters and painters are ready to get started now and the welders don't want to install the fittings until the tank is in place because of the limited space to work around. When the tank gets installed and the fittings get welded on the heat from welding will cause the paint to bubble and chip. The paint can be touched up later.
I'm sure I'm not the first one to run into this problem, has anyone attached a heat sink to the welding area to help reduce the heat? I also came across something called heat sink paste. It seems like it might help absorb the heat. Has anyone used heat sink paste before? Does it only reject a little of the weld heat or does it do a good job of rejecting a lot of heat?
Thanks in advance,
Andrew