there might be a few considerations on whether the steel wheels will work in your application. Is the pipe concentric weight wise, meaning does it have any branch connections that might make it heavier in spots as you are rolling it? If it has weight off center it may want to slip as it is rolled. The only other thing that I can think of that might be a consideration would be how picky your customer might be if the pipe is stainless and they are worried about the contact between the drive wheels and the pipe. Just a thought, aevald
Well, just a few comments; with the pipe rotating on steel wheels you will likely be plagued with arc marks from contact and, it's my opinion that the rubber wheels will give a smoother "ride" during rotation resulting in potentially less rework.
Finally, if you ever wanted to use this arrangement for stainless steel you'd probably not be able to....
I agree with the arc marks up to a point, but if they placed the ground on the pipe itself, why would it arc through the steel wheels? Obviously they are grounding to the pipe itself because they were using rubber wheels.
John Wright
MICARTA wheels. Expensive but well worth it.
200 F doesn't seem to be excessive for the wheels on welding rolls. Are you sure your welders are not overheating or applying the heat to close the wheels?
Hey, I got some of those steel wheels I'll let you have for cheap. If yalls interested I could maybe send you a pic of them ??? I think that I'm quite sure that they would hold the weight... How high do they need to be ??? Or maybe not ????