Silver soldering stainless

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stragenmitsuko

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I guess I learned something new today .

I''m quite familiar with silver soldering , mostly brass fittings on red copper , or red copper to red copper .
Never had any problems with it . If the copper is clean enough I can even do it without flux .

So I'm retrofitting an airco to a vintage toyota MR2 Mk1 .
and I needed to solder ss parts to 1/2 copper , and to 1/2 stainless .
And to my surprise that didn't work as I expected .
So first thouht , I had the wrong kind of flux . I bought new one , specificly asked for stainless , and the result
was even worse . The solder wouldn't flow , wouldn't bind to the stainless .
Made such a mess I was ashamed of myself .

So what went wrong ?

To much heat , to fast .
Red copper is a very good heat conductor , so it's easy to heat it evenly and then apply the solder .
Basicly just blaze that oxy /acetetylene torch until it's hot enough and solder .
Only takes a couple of seconds really on thin walled 1/2 pipe .

Ss is a bad conductor , so what happend is with that acetylene torch I overheated the flux while
the metal wasn't up to temperature yet . I got local red hot spots on the stainless , while the opposite side
was still relatively cold . The flux turned into a black scale that had to be sand blasted to remove it .
Impossible to silver solder that .

So I turned down the heat on the torch , made a longer flame with less oxygen , and
allowed the stainless to reach the brazing temperature slowly .
Carefully watching the flux colour also helped .
As soon as it turnes kind of transparent it's hot enough , and then you just keep gently heating the ss
until the solder starts to flow .

Once I knew what I was doing wrong , it all worked out as I expected .

So as the saying goes , never to old to learn something new :)
 
Glad you stuck with it and got it to work. Do you know what flux and silver solder you were using to bond to both the SS and Cu?

Along those same lines, a connector sales rep, who had probably been around since Mil style connectors were invented, related his thoughts to me about crimp style connectors vs solder style.
"Crimping is a science, Soldering is an art."
Nice art work on your project. :cool:
 
Here's a picture of a failed joint .
Altough the copper pipe in the background is fully soldered , the stainless isn't .
There's a black spot inside , and that is the burned flux .

I had to machine it out to get rid of it and resolder .





solder.jpg



About connectors , crimping is for mechanical strength , soldering is for good electrical contact .
At least that's what I'v been told , and that's the way I've away's done it .
Crimped only connectors will work just fine , but give it a few years in the harsh conditions
under the hood of a car and they'll start corroding and eventually fail .

Cheers

Pat
 
Here's a picture of a failed joint .
Altough the copper pipe in the background is fully soldered , the stainless isn't .
There's a black spot inside , and that is the burned flux .

I had to machine it out to get rid of it and resolder .





View attachment 137379


About connectors , crimping is for mechanical strength , soldering is for good electrical contact .
At least that's what I'v been told , and that's the way I've away's done it .
Crimped only connectors will work just fine , but give it a few years in the harsh conditions
under the hood of a car and they'll start corroding and eventually fail .

Cheers

Pat
Which is why I always solder electrical connections where possible.
 
I understand the controversy over crimp-vs-solder. I worked in an environment of making marine navigation systems for navies around the world. Lots of wiring and wire harnesses. In all of this, probably 99% of the electrical connections were crimped. But, despite that, I too, solder most of my electronic connections at home, and do not really trust my at-home-crimp connections.

And here is why.
The crimping of the military electrical connections is very much a science. All wire was stranded silver plated copper to various mil-specs. All of the wire terminals were mill-spec for the specific wire size and connector or terminal board. All crimping was done with the proper mil-spec die and mil-spec crimper handle. Whenever a project was started, crimped wire samples were submitted for inspection under a microscope and for a pull test to be sure the crimp was secure. All inspections and tests were documented on paperwork. A lot of care, skill, inspection, etc, was done to make sure the crimping and materials were correct.

So with all this info about crimping, why do I still solder most of my connections? Because I don't have access (or money) for access to all the resources necessary to make 100% reliable crimped connections. Using no-name plain copper wire, doing crimping with a pair of pliers or "universal" crimper instead of a proper crimper, no reliable method to do a pull test or inspect 100% of the joints. etc. All of this leads to failures in the future. But done correctly, crimping is fast, reliable, and only requires attention to detail, not a super specialized skill.

I specifically remember one project from years ago where we were manufacturing the large slip-ring that went between the hull and turret of the M1 tank. One of the sliprings in the unit had 4 circuits that each carried 200 amps. I think plain copper 4 gauge stranded wire was used to make the internal runs. There was a voltage drop test that was done to each unit at final test. Some of the units, that had previously passed at an earlier test, were failing the voltage drop test. We found that just wiggling the 6 gauge wire at a set-screw type of termination fixed the voltage drop problem. The plain copper wire had developed tarnish,which is not very conductive, at some of the connections. The simple fix was changing from plain copper stranded wire to silver plated copper wire. Unlike copper tarnish, silver tarnish IS conductive. Problem eliminated, but everything had to be done correctly.

Moral of the story: Use either crimp or solder, whichever you have most confidence in, but no matter what, do it correctly.
I think I overspent my 2 cents, LOL.

And sorry for hijacking your thread.
Lloyd
 
I had the same problem with the Meyers Rider Ericsson Hot Air Engine. Specs called for Silver Soldering a SS round to an Iron tube. What I had acted like your first try. Wouldn't flow. Went to the welding shop with my blueprints. What solder were you using, they asked? Showed them. No, that won't work, use this. I was using silver solder with a silver content something like 3, 6 or 9%, too low. They showed me 3 sticks of 51% silver solder, orange covered flux about 20 inches long. $10 a stick, $30 for the tube of 3. Did it work? Absolutely. I will pay for something, IF IT WORKS!!
 
I worked in TV maintenance for about 30 years. Our transmitters used various combinations of voltage and current 36KV at 1.5A and 40V at 400 A. Gas-tight, mechanically strong joints were very important. The correct crimp tool was, as you said, very important too.
The joints which had the most failures were the RF (radio frequency) connections on the microwave trucks, out in the elements. For those, a good crimp or soldered connector followed by a sealant was required.
I had an argument once with one of the older guys when he saw me soldering a spade lug after I crimped it. He said the solder made the wires brittle at the joint. My point was, in all of the connections I repaired, none had broken due to brittleness, but plenty had pulled out of the connector! I still solder after I crimp.
 
I have an oxy/acetylene set up. I slowly heated the material until I touched the rod to the work and it started flowing. Then I lightly heated the work all around and watched the solder flow nicely around the material until done. Try to slowly bring up the temperature of the metal until the solder starts to flow.
 
I guess I learned something new today .

I''m quite familiar with silver soldering , mostly brass fittings on red copper , or red copper to red copper .
Never had any problems with it . If the copper is clean enough I can even do it without flux .

So I'm retrofitting an airco to a vintage toyota MR2 Mk1 .
and I needed to solder ss parts to 1/2 copper , and to 1/2 stainless .
And to my surprise that didn't work as I expected .
So first thouht , I had the wrong kind of flux . I bought new one , specificly asked for stainless , and the result
was even worse . The solder wouldn't flow , wouldn't bind to the stainless .
Made such a mess I was ashamed of myself .

So what went wrong ?

To much heat , to fast .
Red copper is a very good heat conductor , so it's easy to heat it evenly and then apply the solder .
Basicly just blaze that oxy /acetetylene torch until it's hot enough and solder .
Only takes a couple of seconds really on thin walled 1/2 pipe .

Ss is a bad conductor , so what happend is with that acetylene torch I overheated the flux while
the metal wasn't up to temperature yet . I got local red hot spots on the stainless , while the opposite side
was still relatively cold . The flux turned into a black scale that had to be sand blasted to remove it .
Impossible to silver solder that .

So I turned down the heat on the torch , made a longer flame with less oxygen , and
allowed the stainless to reach the brazing temperature slowly .
Carefully watching the flux colour also helped .
As soon as it turnes kind of transparent it's hot enough , and then you just keep gently heating the ss
until the solder starts to flow .

Once I knew what I was doing wrong , it all worked out as I expected .

So as the saying goes , never to old to learn something new :)
I have an oxy/acetylene set up. I slowly heated the material until I touched the rod to the work and it started flowing. Then I lightly heated the work all around and watched the solder flow nicely around the material until done. Try to slowly bring up the temperature of the metal until the solder starts to flow.
Stainless is not all the same you probably did the right-thing by reducing oxy Even TIG welding with back purge can be troublesome with some alloys heated stainless is usually much more likely to coorosion or stain . As I call it . Even a little too much heat can cause issues Tig is done submerged in inert atmosphere or vacuum with flame you have all the enemies of SS right at hand . A little “off” and there is a problem as you noted reducing the temp possibly put you just far enough so you were successful .
 
the word "silver solder" spans two really different things - a high silver lead/tin solder used for electronics, and what is sometimes called "hard" solder that has no lead or tin it's silver and some other metals. If you fix Tek oscilloscopes, you use the former, if you make jewlery use the latter. solft silver solder melts around 600 to 700F, hard solder melts around 1600 to 1800F. they are very very different.
 
Thanks Lloyd, William B 'n all. I agree with almost everything here. Having worked on cable manufacture, and cable installations, with crimped, soft soldered and high temp Silver brazing (Gas torches, and carbon arc torches, not Oxy mixed with fuel), as well as high powered "solid" joints, my experience is summarised below (for the benefit of anyone with time to waste...):
- Soft soldered electrical wires to electrical connections are great - for less than 20+ years before the flux residue causes an electrolytic corrosion and creation of "dry joints" - where corrosion residues (insulating salts) develop at the conductive interface between materials. This is why your 1960s transistor often fails to work. "Dry joints" on circuit boards. Soft solder isn't strong, so should not be subjected to mechanical stresses. It is likely to fail, or the adjacent copper, or other parent metal (e.g. sheet steel), etc. will fail, because the solder forms "unknown" and significant stress raisers at the interface between joint and parent material. This is why soldered joints are avoided in cars etc as a manufacturing standard, because they have a high warranty failure rate when cables harnesses etc flex with vehicle and road generated vibration.
- High temp silver brazing causes a mix of chemistry between the parent metal and solder - due to the high temp and materials selected - so the strength of the joint (properly designed and manufactured) should last half a human lifetime, in most cases. The material matrix in the joint is likely to be at least as "strong" as copper, but not as strong as steel. And because careful design avoids repetitive stresses within joints, the joints should be good for fatigue (failing in parent metal).
- Crimped joints are mechanically strong - because they are designed that way - with stress relieving radii strategically positioned to avoid fatigue failures at the crimp. But the metals inside will corrode environmentally, and electrolytically if different (Copper on galvanised steel, etc.). Greasing to protect the joint is very good. British Telecoms used grease filled crimped joints joining copper wires on telephone cables for something like 70 years, because they were electrically reliable. When you have a 1012-pairs of wires in a hole in the ground, you need reliable joints. - mostly superceded now by a few bits of glass "wire". I have fixed numerous broken soldered wire joints and connectors, etc, on motorcycles, and rarely had to fix a crimped one for mechanical failure. But they do fail electrically.
- Bolted joints (as on major electrical stuff) have "spring-loaded" bolt assemblies (Belville washers, appropriately torqued) to maintain the contact pressure under "huge" temperature differential expansion variations, surfaces of metal that are specially prepared, greases that contain metals to help maintain the electrical continuity and prevent corrosion, and sometimes mechanical support to prevent the joints from being mechanically loaded. 120,000 Amp joints in aluminium busbars (in an aluminium smelter) have a special mineral grease, with acids to prevent (dissolve) oxides from forming, and zinc powder to assist in the contact between roughened aluminium surfaces (the microscopic peaks crush against each other for joint continuity) - and last decades between services. Copper to copper bolted joints in Power Station generators, (only tens of thousands of Amps) use a different grease (silver loaded) and silvered palms on the joints, so the silver (plating) on the machined copper carries the current across the mechanical interface.
-- In conclusion, there is no perfect joint, just a range of "better" solutions depending upon design and application. Poor (or absent) design or manufacture WILL FAIL. Good design can fail due to poor manufacture, materials, or situations beyond the design limits and considerations. Crimp makers, andf their toolmakers, solder manufacturers, etc. all make their money from Original manufacture, and do "service" manufacturing and sales as a top-up business, because there is always more money to be made. But these "service" sales rarely have any responsibility for what they sell.
- So check your designs are right, you have selected the right joint (design and method) for the right application and lifetime environment, and joints are carefully and properly made. Then maybe the joints will outlast you and you won't have to repair them later.
The only joints I avoid are the ones being sold to tourists on the streets of Jamaica... (Over priced, cheapest "materials", no worries if they "fail" to perform, and salesmen have no expectation of repeat customers!).
Enjoy!
K2
 
I guess I learned something new today .

I''m quite familiar with silver soldering , mostly brass fittings on red copper , or red copper to red copper .
Never had any problems with it . If the copper is clean enough I can even do it without flux .

So I'm retrofitting an airco to a vintage toyota MR2 Mk1 .
and I needed to solder ss parts to 1/2 copper , and to 1/2 stainless .
And to my surprise that didn't work as I expected .
So first thouht , I had the wrong kind of flux . I bought new one , specificly asked for stainless , and the result
was even worse . The solder wouldn't flow , wouldn't bind to the stainless .
Made such a mess I was ashamed of myself .

So what went wrong ?

To much heat , to fast .
Red copper is a very good heat conductor , so it's easy to heat it evenly and then apply the solder .
Basicly just blaze that oxy /acetetylene torch until it's hot enough and solder .
Only takes a couple of seconds really on thin walled 1/2 pipe .

Ss is a bad conductor , so what happend is with that acetylene torch I overheated the flux while
the metal wasn't up to temperature yet . I got local red hot spots on the stainless , while the opposite side
was still relatively cold . The flux turned into a black scale that had to be sand blasted to remove it .
Impossible to silver solder that .

So I turned down the heat on the torch , made a longer flame with less oxygen , and
allowed the stainless to reach the brazing temperature slowly .
Carefully watching the flux colour also helped .
As soon as it turnes kind of transparent it's hot enough , and then you just keep gently heating the ss
until the solder starts to flow .

Once I knew what I was doing wrong , it all worked out as I expected .

So as the saying goes , never to old to learn something new :)
There so many type of silver solder
It you wrong one you have to remove all the before you the new silver solder.

The better and stronger the silver is the higher the price.

Dave
 
You find s
I guess I learned something new today .

I''m quite familiar with silver soldering , mostly brass fittings on red copper , or red copper to red copper .
Never had any problems with it . If the copper is clean enough I can even do it without flux .

So I'm retrofitting an airco to a vintage toyota MR2 Mk1 .
and I needed to solder ss parts to 1/2 copper , and to 1/2 stainless .
And to my surprise that didn't work as I expected .
So first thouht , I had the wrong kind of flux . I bought new one , specificly asked for stainless , and the result
was even worse . The solder wouldn't flow , wouldn't bind to the stainless .
Made such a mess I was ashamed of myself .

So what went wrong ?

To much heat , to fast .
Red copper is a very good heat conductor , so it's easy to heat it evenly and then apply the solder .
Basicly just blaze that oxy /acetetylene torch until it's hot enough and solder .
Only takes a couple of seconds really on thin walled 1/2 pipe .

Ss is a bad conductor , so what happend is with that acetylene torch I overheated the flux while
the metal wasn't up to temperature yet . I got local red hot spots on the stainless , while the opposite side
was still relatively cold . The flux turned into a black scale that had to be sand blasted to remove it .
Impossible to silver solder that .

So I turned down the heat on the torch , made a longer flame with less oxygen , and
allowed the stainless to reach the brazing temperature slowly .
Carefully watching the flux colour also helped .
As soon as it turnes kind of transparent it's hot enough , and then you just keep gently heating the ss
until the solder starts to flow .

Once I knew what I was doing wrong , it all worked out as I expected .

So as the saying goes , never to old to learn something new :)
You can find silver solder that can solder at 500° and as hight as 1,500°F. The higher temperature the stronger the joint.

I only use the higher temperature solder

Dave
 
Many moons ago, while in the US Navy, I attended Shipfitter “A” school with brazing and shielded arc welding. All soldering was with soft solder, but my next school was a Shipfitter “B” school for high pressure silver soldering. The amount of prep work and care for a high pressure steam joint to pass inspection was extraordinary.

Following up at the Shipfitter pipe and fab welding program (TIG/shielded arc/MIG) to include pressure hull and nuclear pipe was almost easier! My final welding school was airframe TIG, and after the others, was a breeze.

I credit that high pressure silver brazing school for my success these days when I can’t weld a piece but have to braze it. Thank God for low melting point “silver” solders!

John W
 
I guess I learned something new today . I’ve rarely had good luck silver soldering stainless being a TIG welder I’ve usually welded as to as. I have a doublevtegulatregulatoror so it’s pretty easy to back purge. Copper to stainless I usually silicone braze . I’ve used the sta brute silver solder but almost always it comes out as you found gently heating the ss as you found works best it always was critical . I’ve made a number Rc scale functioning exhausts using copper and ss but the divine bronze worked best. Even so well cleaned isn’t good enough extra well cleaned works but I found it marginal on a good day I try to avoid different metal joining ibeithervmake it all copper and ore trim excess weight befor assemblynor make it all ss. Even if I have to make bending and forming tools. Mostbofcwhatbive done on Rc stuff is micro thin wall .015” some times even less . I’ve repaired lots of auto trim and that is frustrating to say he least as it gets corroded so even harder to repair. Fortunately it time and material jobs often cost no object as the stuff doesn’t exist any more. Sometimes it just becomes all weld that has to be hand ground to shape and polished. Restoration classic cars aren’t cheap to have done. I try to hide when this stuff comes around. Now that I don’t see well makes it easier to avoid. . Probably the worst case is when you give and outlandishly high quote and the reply is “ is that all. Are you sure that’s enough? “

I''m quite familiar with silver soldering , mostly brass fittings on red copper , or red copper to red copper .
Never had any problems with it . If the copper is clean enough I can even do it without flux .

So I'm retrofitting an airco to a vintage toyota MR2 Mk1 .
and I needed to solder ss parts to 1/2 copper , and to 1/2 stainless .
And to my surprise that didn't work as I expected .
So first thouht , I had the wrong kind of flux . I bought new one , specificly asked for stainless , and the result
was even worse . The solder wouldn't flow , wouldn't bind to the stainless .
Made such a mess I was ashamed of myself .

So what went wrong ?

To much heat , to fast .
Red copper is a very good heat conductor , so it's easy to heat it evenly and then apply the solder .
Basicly just blaze that oxy /acetetylene torch until it's hot enough and solder .
Only takes a couple of seconds really on thin walled 1/2 pipe .

Ss is a bad conductor , so what happend is with that acetylene torch I overheated the flux while
the metal wasn't up to temperature yet . I got local red hot spots on the stainless , while the opposite side
was still relatively cold . The flux turned into a black scale that had to be sand blasted to remove it .
Impossible to silver solder that .

So I turned down the heat on the torch , made a longer flame with less oxygen , and
allowed the stainless to reach the brazing temperature slowly .
Carefully watching the flux colour also helped .
As soon as it turnes kind of transparent it's hot enough , and then you just keep gently heating the ss
until the solder starts to flow .

Once I knew what I was doing wrong , it all worked out as I expected .

So as the saying goes , never to old to learn something new :)
Here's a picture of a failed joint .
Altough the copper pipe in the background is fully soldered , the stainless isn't .
There's a black spot inside , and that is the burned flux .

I had to machine it out to get rid of it and resolder .





View attachment 137379


About connectors , crimping is for mechanical strength , soldering is for good electrical contact .
At least that's what I'v been told , and that's the way I've away's done it .
Crimped only connectors will work just fine , but give it a few years in the harsh conditions
under the hood of a car and they'll start corroding and eventually fail .

Cheers

Pat
 
Back in the seventies I ran a double home-still consisting of two stainless steel 150 liter vessels that I had welded. All the pipe-work fittings on the vessel I silver-soldered myself with a high temperature silver solder. On top sat a stainless steel so-called Norse Destillation Column, which is a a pipe of say 150 mm diameter and 300 mm length filled with marbles. This column I also put together by silver soldering. It all held very well for about 30 years. By that time my wife got a position where she was commanding the local police force. We deemed it wise to stop the moonshining.
 
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