Training Articles
Troubleshooting PAC Systems: Troubleshooting
Parts Life Problems
By Dave Cook, Centricut Technical Services
Director
Article originally appeared in "Welding Design & Fabrication"
October 2000
Parts Life Problems
One of the most common and frustrating problems in plasma cutting
is short parts life. This problem costs the fabricator, both in
increased consumable expense and machine downtime for changing
parts and troubleshooting. Most companies keep some record of
parts life based on pierce counts, arc on time, or number of plates
processed. The operator is usually the first to know when the
parts aren't lasting as expected. Here are some technical tips
to help the operator or maintenance man troubleshoot a parts life
problem.
WARNING! Read all safety information
in your operations manual before operating or repairing PAC equipment.
PAC systems use high voltage and direct current (DC) electricity.
Electric shock can injure or kill!
Symptom: The electrode and nozzle fail prematurely, causing
a deterioration in cut quality, failure to pierce, or sudden loss
of arc in the middle of a cut.
Background : The electrode carries the negative DC charge
from the power supply. It is comprised of a copper holder that
contains an emissive element of hafnium or tungsten-metals with
high melting points that will sustain an arc. The emitting element
is slowly eroded away by the heat of the arc, and the high velocity
plasma gas stream. During normal wear a small concave pit is formed
in the end of the part which steadily wears away, a few thousandths
of an inch at a time, to a depth of .040" to .125" deep. When
the pit becomes too deep, the arc attaches to the copper holder
and melts it. The electrode "fails" when it will no longer initiate
and sustain an arc. It is a good practice to remove the electrode
before it fails.
The nozzle focuses the plasma jet. The hole in the nozzle should
be perfectly round and concentric. Both the diameter and length
of the hole are critical: any damage to the orifice will affect
the shape of the arc and therefore, the quality of the cut piece.
The plasma arc passes through the nozzle without contacting the
copper material because the walls of the nozzle are protected
by a boundary layer of swirling gas. If the arc does contact the
nozzle it will melt some material away. Normal wear for a nozzle
is slight chamfering or enlarging of the hole on the leading edge
of the orifice. Some damage occurs to the face of the part during
each pilot, this causes heat discoloration around the orifice.
Deposits of hafnium oxide can build up on the interior surface
causing disruption of gas flow. The nozzle "fails" when it will
no longer produce a straight arc and a good clean cut.
Normal parts life for state-of-the-art air and oxygen plasma
systems is 1-2 hours of arc-on time and several hundred pierces.
Several systems can reach 1000 or more starts before a parts change
is necessary.
Troubleshooting:
The first step in solving any parts life problem is to examine
the parts thoroughly and determine which part failed. The parts
usually provide visible clues to the root cause of failure. There
are 3 possible cases:
Case 1: Electrode bad/nozzle bad
If inspection of the parts reveals that both electrode and nozzle
are severely worn, it is likely that the electrode caused failure
of the nozzle. Since the electrode is upstream, it will cause
damage to the nozzle when molten material is blown out of the
end of the part and deposited into the nozzle interior. If run
long enough, all parts will fail in this way.
- If the electrode has a deep wide pit and the copper
has turned straw colored, blue, or black from overheating,
the likely cause is low coolant flow. In extreme cases the
end of the electrode may be melted away. Verify the flow rate
of the cooling medium. In water cooled torches check the cooling
water flow rate with a bucket test at the return to the coolant
tank. If it is not to spec, check for pump problems, kinks,
leaks, plugged filters, or other restrictions. In gas cooled
torches check for low gas flow.
- If the electrode has small pock marks all over the end
of the part with corresponding damage to the interior
of the nozzle, low gas flow is implicated. Low gas flow allows
uncontrolled arcing between the nozzle and electrode. Check
the gas flow rates to the torch. The best way to do this is
with a flowmeter (0-400 cfh) and hose placed on the outlet
of the torch with the system in test. If not available, a
quick check is to feel the gas flow at the outlet of the torch
with only plasma gas turned on. You should feel a swirling
flow of gas that actually has a suction force.
- If the electrode has a heavy layer of black residue,
check for gas contamination. One quick check is the paper
towel test. Hold a clean paper towel under the torch with
gas flowing through the system. There should be no sign of
moisture or contamination.
Case 2: Electrode good/nozzle bad:
If the electrode appears virtually new and the nozzle is severely
damaged, the most likely cause of failure is double arcing of
the nozzle. This occurs if the arc contacts the nozzle and erodes
copper material from the orifice.
- Damage to the interior of the nozzle such as a slot
or "keyhole" indicates low pressure in the plasma chamber.
This allows the arc to attach to the nozzle. Check for leaks
in the gas lines by pressurizing the lines and using soapy
water on all fittings.
- Damage to the exterior of the nozzle often indicates
a problem with torch to work distance. First check the pierce
height; it should be 2X the cut height to avoid metal spatter.
Piercing too low is the number one cause of premature nozzle
failure. Check for proper operation of the torch height
control. If the torch pierces when it is pushed against
the plate, or scrapes the plate during a cut, the nozzle
will be instantly destroyed.
- If the nozzle looks extremely hot, straw colored, blue
or black in color, check the shield gas flow. The shield
gas helps to cool the nozzle and protect the front end of
the torch.
Case 3: Electrode bad/nozzle good:
If the nozzle is in good condition but the electrode has a
deep concentric pit, the plasma gas flow rate may be too high.
If the plasma gas swirl is too intense, the element is eroded
quickly. This causes a rapid deep wear pattern. Check the
volumetric flow rate of the plasma gas.
A fourth case exists: if both parts look virtually new but
the torch failed to "fire", and a new set allows the torch
to start, the problem is not parts life; it's hard starting.
Often, perfectly good electrodes and nozzles are discarded
because they failed to fire. Hard starting is most often caused
by excessive plasma pressure during preflow when the torch
is igniting. Usually the torch "spits and sputters" and struggles
to start.