David was it you, your brother and father who drove up to my place in Kansas and got a 6.5 from me many years ago?
That was us. Green diesel suburban, and your 599 engine fit in the back with something like an inch to spare.David was it you, your brother and father who drove up to my place in Kansas and got a 6.5 from me many years ago?
I'll never forget watching you guys stuff that motor in the back of the Sub. Never saw anything like that before.That was us. Green diesel suburban, and your 599 engine fit in the back with something like an inch to spare.
David


That’s exactly what I used to get this stuff done.I don't remember if yours has it. But I've been using the pulse feature a lot on my tig on thin stuff anymore. Takes a little practice but makes it stupid easy once set right.
I have no idea what you're talking about but it looks cool!Chipping away during mornings, and evenings.
I used high frequency DC, 33%\33%, 120Hz, 90A-110A (never matted the pedal at 120A).
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Low current silicone bronze follow up.
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Rather than straight current TIG, high frequency pulses the current. In this case, I used 120 pulses per second (Hertz), with 33% of the current on background (30ish amps), and full current (90ish amps) on 33% of the time. These pulse settings are super useful at focusing the arc, can lower the heat input on thin stuff and prevent burning out the work.I have no idea what you're talking about but it looks cool!
Sounds like a pwm controller used on things like fans and leds.


Bless you. The Instagram and YouTube kids don’t get my references.You sounded just like Frank The Tank just then...
