Worn TIG torch consumables usually show up as dirty tungsten, rough arc starts, porosity, black soot, poor gas coverage, tungsten slipping, cup cracking, and inconsistent bead color. The problem is often not the welder. It is usually in the torch front end: cup, collet, collet body, gas lens, back cap, O-ring, insulator, or tungsten.
Start by checking the parts that control gas flow and tungsten grip. A cracked cup leaks shielding gas. A worn collet lets the tungsten slide or sit off-center. A clogged gas lens disrupts argon flow. A damaged back cap O-ring can pull air into the torch. If the tungsten turns black, the weld gets sooty, or the arc wanders after consumables heat up, inspect the torch before changing amperage or blaming the machine.
Related TIG support checks include why TIG tungsten turns black, TIG porosity troubleshooting, TIG cup size selection, and sooty TIG weld gas coverage fixes.
Common Symptoms
| Symptom | Likely Worn Consumable | First Check |
|---|---|---|
| Tungsten slips or pulls back | Collet, collet body, back cap | Inspect collet grip and correct tungsten size |
| Black or gray tungsten | Cup, gas lens, O-ring, gas leak | Verify argon flow and post-flow |
| Porosity appears suddenly | Cracked cup, clogged gas lens, leaking torch | Inspect cup and gas lens screen |
| Arc wanders | Contaminated tungsten, loose collet, worn collet body | Regrind tungsten and check clamp force |
| Soot around weld | Poor gas coverage, damaged cup, turbulent flow | Check cup size, gas lens, and torch angle |
| Cup keeps cracking | Overheating, impact, wrong cup setup | Check amperage, cup fit, and torch cooling |
What Each TIG Consumable Does
- Cup/nozzle: directs shielding gas around the tungsten and weld pool.
- Collet: grips the tungsten when the back cap is tightened.
- Collet body: holds the collet and positions the tungsten in the torch.
- Gas lens: smooths gas flow and improves coverage, especially with longer stickout.
- Back cap: tightens the collet and seals the rear of the torch.
- O-rings and insulators: prevent gas leaks and keep torch parts sealed and aligned.
- Tungsten: carries the arc; contamination or overheating changes arc shape immediately.
Visual Wear Indicators
| Part | Wear Signs | Replace When |
|---|---|---|
| Cup | Cracks, chips, white/brown heat marks, spatter, metal dust | Cracked, leaking, loose, or no longer shielding evenly |
| Collet | Split end spread open, burn marks, weak grip, oval bore | Tungsten slips or will not center |
| Collet body | Damaged threads, poor seating, discoloration, loose fit | Collet will not tighten or tungsten sits crooked |
| Gas lens | Clogged screen, dark deposits, crushed mesh, blocked holes | Gas flow becomes uneven or soot/porosity continues |
| Back cap | Cracked body, damaged threads, missing or flat O-ring | Gas leaks or tungsten will not clamp correctly |
| Insulator/gasket | Burned edges, cracks, missing seal, loose cup fit | Cup leaks, torch heats unevenly, or gas coverage fails |
Inspection Steps
- Let the torch cool. Ceramic cups, tungsten, and copper parts can stay hot after short welds.
- Remove the cup. Check for cracks, chips, dirt, and signs of gas leakage.
- Remove the tungsten. If it is black, crusted, split, balled unexpectedly, or contaminated, regrind or replace it.
- Inspect the collet. Match it to the tungsten diameter. Replace it if grip is weak or the split end is distorted.
- Inspect the collet body or gas lens. Look for blocked screens, damaged threads, and heat discoloration.
- Check the back cap and O-ring. A damaged seal can cause gas coverage problems that look like bad argon.
- Reassemble with matching parts. Do not mix standard cups with gas lens hardware unless the setup is designed for it.
- Test gas flow at the cup. Confirm steady argon flow before striking an arc.
- Run one test bead. Keep amperage and travel unchanged so the consumable change is the isolated variable.
Test Procedures
Tungsten grip test: Install the correct tungsten and tighten the back cap normally. If the tungsten slides with light hand pressure, inspect the collet, collet body, and back cap threads.
Gas coverage test: Weld a short bead with clean tungsten, clean base metal, and no drafts. If bead color improves after replacing the cup or gas lens, the old consumable was disturbing gas flow.
Post-flow test: Watch the tungsten after arc stop. If it turns blue, gray, or black quickly, check post-flow, back cap seal, cup damage, gas lens blockage, and hose leaks.
Field Fix vs Proper Fix
| Problem | Field Fix | Proper Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Tungsten slipping | Tighten back cap slightly | Replace worn collet and verify tungsten diameter |
| Dirty gas lens | Brush or blow out lightly | Replace clogged or damaged screen assembly |
| Cracked cup | Swap cup immediately | Match cup type to torch, amperage, and joint access |
| Black tungsten | Increase post-flow | Repair leaks and replace bad cup, O-ring, or gas lens |
| Arc wanders | Regrind tungsten | Fix collet grip, tungsten contamination, and gas coverage |
Common Wrong-Part Mistakes
- Buying TIG cups by size number only without confirming torch series.
- Using a 17/18/26 collet on a 9/20-style torch or the reverse.
- Installing a gas lens without the matching cup and insulator setup.
- Using a collet that does not match tungsten diameter.
- Replacing tungsten repeatedly while ignoring a leaking back cap O-ring.
- Running long tungsten stickout with a standard collet body when gas lens coverage is needed.
Compatibility Notes
TIG consumables must match the torch family, tungsten diameter, cup style, gas lens or standard collet body setup, and back cap style. Common 17/18/26-style consumables are larger than 9/20-style consumables and should not be treated as interchangeable. If the torch has been replaced in the field, do not order consumables by welder model alone.
Related Failure Paths
- TIG porosity from cracked cups, poor gas lens flow, or leaking O-rings.
- Dirty tungsten from insufficient post-flow or gas leakage.
- Arc wander from weak collet grip or contaminated tungsten.
- Black soot from turbulent argon flow or damaged front-end parts.
- Cup overheating from excess amperage, wrong cup setup, or poor torch cooling.
Safety Notes
- Let hot torch parts cool before disassembly.
- Use eye protection when grinding tungsten or cleaning cups.
- Disconnect power before deeper torch or machine service.
- Secure argon cylinders and use ventilation during test welds.
- Follow shop procedures for thoriated tungsten handling and grinding dust control.
Sources Checked
- Weld Support Parts TIG cup, gas lens, tungsten discoloration, and porosity support pages.
- ESAB/TBi TIG torch consumable guidance.
- Grainger TIG gas lens and collet body descriptions.
- Weldmonger TIG torch consumables overview.