What is induction brazing?
Brazing is a material welding process that uses brazing material (usually accompanied by an antioxidant solvent as a flux) to weld two closely attached metals together without melting their base metal. Induction heating will melt the brazing material, and the base material will then completely adsorb the brazing material through capillary action.
Brazing is a material welding process that uses brazing material (usually accompanied by an antioxidant solvent as a flux) to weld two closely attached metals together without melting their base metal. Induction heating will melt the brazing material, and the base material will then completely adsorb the brazing material through capillary action.
What are the advantages?
Induction brazing can weld various metals, including ferrous and non-ferrous metals. Induction brazing is precise and fast. Only heat narrow defined areas without affecting adjacent areas and materials. The correct brazed joint is firm, leak proof, and corrosion-resistant. At the same time, it is extremely clean and usually does not require further milling, grinding, or machining. Induction brazing can be perfectly integrated into production lines.
What is the purpose of induction brazing?
Braun brazing technology can actually be used for any brazing task. So far, our brazing technology has been widely used in the electrical industry, mainly for brazing components inside generators and transformers, such as copper bars, conductors, leads, wires, and short-circuit rings. Meanwhile, this type of technology can also be used for brazing oil pipes, AC systems, and brake components in the automotive industry. The aviation industry also applies induction brazing technology in the brazing of wind turbine blades, casing plates, fuel and hydraulic systems. In the home appliance industry, our brazing technology can be applied to brazing compressor components, heating elements, and faucets.