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New Tool, super capacitor based spot welder for various electrical connections

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6.8K views 21 replies 7 participants last post by  Millstonemike  
Also a tip or technique, put one probe to a contact point on the rail and the other probe pressing the metal strip into the rail.
In other words, one probe on the rail base metal and one pressing the strip into the base metal so that the current is concentrated and you get a deeper weld (Indirect type- the second one)
View attachment 585813
Do they offer a "clamp" as one probe?
 
For copper you might want more power. There is a thickness rating and these mainly are used with the nickel strips for batteries. Nickel just seems to work really well in that application.
In other words, I have the 801A+, but they make 801B, C, D, and higher. They cost more but the peak amperage is increased.

With copper, my concern is the thermal sink of copper to the rest of the copper. It take more peak energy to heat one spot high enough to melt.
FYI: Those "Nickel" strips are plated steel.
 
You might be right, the ones I'm using are advertised though as "U.S. Solid’s Pure Nickel Strips consist of 99.6% Nickel, which make the ideal for spot welding and building battery packs. "
I just cut one hoping to have an edge that would expose the steel core if it exists and I'm applying a corrosive mix to rapidly rust. I also sanded the strip too just to give us the best chances.
I put those strips in an acidic solution to make nickel sulfate for plating. The strips were far, far less nickel than100% nickel. Like "Gold Filled" jewelry.