Title :
Sensors for narrow-gap welding
Author :
Corlett, B.J. ; Lucas, J. ; Smith, J.S.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., & Electron., Liverpool Univ., UK
fDate :
7/1/1991 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Narrow-gap welding is an important technique for increasing productivity in the manufacture of thick-walled components. The nature of the process demands an automated approach and requires precise control to ensure consistently high weld quality. The authors describe the design, construction and development of appropriate sensors and sensing techniques for the control of the narrow-gap TIG welding (GTAW) process. Sensing systems based on arc-voltage sensing and direct vision sensing were developed and successfully tested on an experimental welding system. The arc-voltage sensing included the design of a digital technique for calculating the size of the voltage drop as the welding torch approaches a sidewall. The vision-based work involved the development of a very fast access framestore and highly optimised techniques for extracting the position of contrast features within a live image. The relative merits of arc-based and vision-based techniques are discussed.
Keywords :
arc welding; electric sensing devices; TIG welding; arc-voltage; control; digital technique; direct vision sensing; narrow-gap welding; sensors; thick-walled components; voltage drop; weld quality;
Journal_Title :
Science, Measurement and Technology, IEE Proceedings A