Spot welding typically uses DC (Direct Current) because it provides a stable and controllable arc for consistent heat.
Some machines can use AC (Alternating Current), but DC is preferred for better penetration and repeatable welds.
The choice depends on the material, thickness, and machine design.
In this article:
Is spot welding AC or DC?
Spot welding is a type of resistance welding, and it can use either AC (Alternating Current) or DC (Direct Current) depending on the equipment and application. Here’s a detailed breakdown:
1. Basics of Spot Welding
- Process: Electrical current passes through electrodes pressing two metal sheets together.
- Heat Generation: Heat is generated locally at the contact point due to electrical resistance (Joule heating).
- Weld Formation: The molten metal solidifies under pressure to form a weld nugget.
- No Filler Metal or Shielding Gas is required.
The key factor is the high current at low voltage, typically 4–12 volts and thousands of amperes.
2. AC Spot Welding
a) How It Works
- The current alternates direction at mains frequency (50–60 Hz).
- Electrode polarity changes every half-cycle, causing heat generation in both sheets.
b) Advantages
- Simple Transformers: AC is easy to generate with a standard welding transformer.
- Electrode Wear is Symmetrical: Both electrodes experience similar heating.
- Common in Traditional/Older Equipment: Most legacy spot welding machines are AC-based.
c) Disadvantages
- Less control over heat: AC fluctuates, so peak heat is lower than DC for the same RMS current.
- Arc Blow Less Relevant: AC reduces electrode magnetic effects (not critical in spot welding).
3. DC Spot Welding
a) How It Works
- Current flows in one direction from one electrode to the other.
- Provides continuous, steady heating at the weld point.
b) Advantages
- More Consistent Heat: DC produces uniform heating, improving weld quality.
- Better for Thick Metals or High-Strength Steels: Steady current forms more reliable weld nuggets.
- Less Transformer Heating: DC allows more precise energy delivery.
c) Disadvantages
- Requires Rectification: AC must be converted to DC, which increases equipment cost.
- Electrode Polarity Considerations: Electrode negative vs positive can slightly affect weld shape and penetration.
4. Key Differences Between AC and DC Spot Welding
| Feature | AC Spot Welding | DC Spot Welding |
|---|---|---|
| Current Flow | Alternating (50–60 Hz) | Direct (one-way) |
| Weld Heat | Fluctuates with AC cycle | Steady and uniform |
| Equipment Complexity | Simpler transformer-based | Requires rectifier or DC power supply |
| Weld Quality | Adequate for thin sheets | Higher consistency, better for thick or high-strength metals |
| Common Use | Older machines, thin sheets | Modern machines, high-quality or critical welds |
5. Summary
- Thin Sheet Welding: AC is sufficient and cheaper for standard automotive panels.
- Thicker or High-Strength Metals: DC is preferred for more controlled heating and weld quality.
- Electrode Considerations: Copper electrodes are used for both; DC polarity may slightly affect penetration.
- Power Requirements: Both use low voltage (~4–12 V) and very high current (~5–50 kA).
Conclusion:
- Spot welding can be AC or DC, depending on the machine and application.
- AC spot welding is common in older machines and for thin sheets; simple and cost-effective.
- DC spot welding provides more uniform heating, better weld quality, and is preferred for thicker sheets or high-strength metals.
- Regardless of AC or DC, heat is localized at the weld spot due to electrical resistance, and electrodes apply pressure to form the weld nugget.
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