Got a call from a rancher who broke his Hay Fork attachment on his tractor (for moving round hay bales), and wanted me to come repair it.
When I got out there, the Hay Fork had not bent any: It just snapped into. Nice, clean breaks, easy to weld back up.
The Hay Fork had been made from old 2.5" pipeline pipe, and it was easily 20 years old, and is always stored out in the weather. I welded it back up using 6011, DC+, at about 90 Amps - enough penetration to go almost through the pipe, and I didn't have to bother with cutting a V-groove in the 1/4" thick wall.
As I was going around the welds with my grinder using a wire brush, I got to noticing that the pipe was cracking close to where the root of the weld met the pipe.
This is the sort of thing I would expect from cast iron, not mild steel.
Did the pipe became brittle with age? What happened? Is there a technique to repairing this, or should we just make him another Hay Fork?