Brazing can be done with a small torch or a big soldering iron. Either electric or brazier heated. The tip on a torch should be small as you don't need the heat you use when gas welding or cutting.
YOU thread or braze copper pipe Copper tubling you solder, braze, flaire, compression ring, mechincal joints
you solder or braze it
In short, no you can't braze tin.Assuming that you are using a fairly standard set-up with an oxyacetylene torch you will burn straight through most grades of tin.
Yes with a 25 M bronze rod made by union carbide
By placing a smaller pipe insider the larger one and weld /braze the gap
You use an acetylene torch and special brazing rods.
Pot metal-no. Better to use jb weld or something.
You cannot solder Steel BUT you can braze steel and copper and you can thread steel and then use a copper x female adapter Or finf a steel fitting and use a C x M adapter
with a copper self fluxing brazing rod type suggested by AWS
Regal Tip I think :)
NO but you will need some type of sealent OR braze or soldering
To prevent oxidation and allow the alloy to flow into the fitting capillary action (attraction) and it is best to use a non acid flux and if one knows how to braze they can braze joints with a tensile strength of 87,000 PSI without the use of flux PROVIDING you use the correct rod as per AWS
Clean the base metal use a high temperature flux using a torch capable of getting the base metal almost cherry red and if you braze the joint properly your tensile strength should exceed 87,000
You can use the spray type or liquid type. For the liquid type, you can use a q-tip, small needle, clean patch, clean rag, etc..
Equipment to braze metal is commonly available in hardware stores and is sold in kits. Typically, it consists of a torch and several types of rods to braze metal. that is not what im looking for yea that is my question
you should use sharpie fine tip or normal markers
Yes, its a requirement of all manufacturers, that i know of, to braze 410a connections with a brazing alloy containing a minimum of 15%