elkriverfab wrote:Check for dry air to plasma cutter.
Must be dry, dry, dry.
Check all grounds, I ground direct to work piece every time.
Make sure your consumables are correct for torch ( probably are but it doesn't hurt to double check, I have had the supply shop give me the wrong ones in the correct packaging on several occasions).
I cant stress enough on steel quality, I have wasted a lot of time and money on steel that was crap.
Nothing like spending $100.00 on a sheet and have to pull it off the table and throw it out because you cant cut it with clean results!
I'll talk to my boss about figuring out a cheap air cooler or "dryer" for the table. I have herd of people using buckets of ice water coiling the air hose and dumping them. Has anyone tried this??
The ground seems in a good place but I'll check the grounding point again just to be sure.
And steel quality, I've read a lot of threads on steel quality I have done some welding before and I've seen what shitty metal can do to a weld. So i'll also dig into where the metal for my table is coming from.
ronsii wrote: ground clamp actually attached to cut material.
I"ll try this but i have a water table so i don't wanna submerge the grounding clamp but i guess it never hurts to try once.
jimcolt wrote:when moisture is added this mix changes, which affects the arc....which will show as loss of power in the cut. This is the time of year that we most often hear of these symptoms.
True I've been doing a bit of searching and have found a lot of people saying moist air and such. My current set up is Compressor tank > splitter > filter > plasma cutter. And I live in Houston, TX sooo hot humid air is pretty much everywhere LOL.
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU EVERYONE!!! all you guys have helped a ton I was really moments away from tossing this thing but this gives me new hope. I really appreciate all your guys help and the information this forum provides thanks a ton.