TIG tungsten balls on AC because the electrode is getting too hot at the tip. A small controlled ball can be normal on older transformer-style AC aluminum welding, especially with pure or zirconiated tungsten. Excessive balling, mushrooming, splitting, wandering arc, or tungsten dropping into the weld usually means the tungsten is overloaded, the AC balance puts too much heat on the electrode, the tungsten diameter is too small, the electrode type is wrong for the machine, or the shielding gas is not protecting the hot tungsten.
On modern inverter AC TIG machines, a sharp or truncated point is usually preferred over a large ball. If the tungsten balls immediately reduce electrode-positive cleaning action, use a larger tungsten, switch to 2% lanthanated, ceriated, or zirconiated tungsten depending on the machine and procedure, shorten stickout, verify argon coverage, and confirm the torch is not overheating.
Related TIG checks include why TIG tungsten turns black, TIG porosity troubleshooting, and TIG cup size and gas coverage selection.
Common Symptoms
| Symptom | Likely Cause | First Check |
|---|---|---|
| Tungsten forms a large ball immediately | Too much heat on electrode, tungsten too small, wrong AC balance | Check tungsten diameter and reduce cleaning action |
| Ball grows wider than tungsten diameter | Electrode overloaded | Use larger tungsten or reduce amperage |
| Arc wanders around the ball | Ball too large or contaminated tungsten | Regrind to truncated point |
| Tungsten splits or spits into puddle | Overheating, contamination, wrong tungsten type | Replace electrode and verify AC settings |
| Tungsten turns black after welding | Poor post-flow or gas coverage failure | Check argon flow, cup, gas lens, and post-flow |
What Causes Tungsten Balling on AC?
- Too much electrode-positive time: More cleaning action puts more heat into the tungsten.
- Tungsten diameter too small: A small electrode cannot carry the selected amperage without melting back.
- Wrong tungsten for the machine: Pure tungsten balls easily and is mainly associated with older transformer AC machines.
- Too much amperage: The electrode overheats before the puddle stabilizes.
- Long tungsten stickout: Poor cooling and weak gas coverage let the tip overheat and oxidize.
- Contamination: Touching filler, puddle, aluminum oxide, or dirty base metal makes the tip deform.
- Poor shielding gas: Low flow, high turbulent flow, cracked cup, bad gas lens, or short post-flow damages the hot tungsten.
Electrode Choice Notes
For older transformer AC aluminum welding, pure tungsten may naturally form a balled end. Zirconiated tungsten is often used where a balled or rounded end is desired with better contamination resistance. On modern inverter AC machines, lanthanated and ceriated tungstens usually hold a prepared point better and give a more focused arc. Do not assume the same tungsten prep works for every AC TIG machine.
| Tungsten Type | AC Behavior | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Pure tungsten | Balls readily | Mostly for transformer AC; lower current capacity |
| Zirconiated | Retains rounded/balled end better | Good AC choice where weld contamination is a concern |
| Lanthanated | Holds point well on inverter AC | Common modern AC/DC TIG choice |
| Ceriated | Good starts and stable arc | Often used for lower-amperage TIG |
| Thoriated | Less common for AC aluminum today | Radiation concern; verify shop procedure |
Inspection Steps
- Identify the machine type. Transformer AC and inverter AC do not use the same tungsten-prep approach.
- Check tungsten diameter. If the ball exceeds the electrode diameter or forms instantly, the electrode may be undersized for amperage.
- Check AC balance. Reduce cleaning action if the machine is putting excessive heat into the tungsten.
- Check AC frequency if available. Higher frequency focuses the arc but can require a stable prepared tip.
- Regrind the tungsten. Use a clean truncated point for inverter AC unless the procedure calls for a ball.
- Inspect gas coverage. Check cup size, cracked cup, gas lens condition, argon flow, and post-flow.
- Clean aluminum thoroughly. Remove oxide and contamination before welding; do not make the tungsten carry the cleaning burden.
- Watch torch heat. A hot air-cooled torch can contribute to consumable and tungsten failure.
Field Fix vs Proper Fix
| Problem | Field Fix | Proper Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Large ball forms instantly | Lower amperage and reduce cleaning action | Use correct tungsten diameter and AC balance |
| Arc wanders | Regrind tungsten | Use truncated point and correct AC frequency/balance |
| Tungsten spits into weld | Stop and replace tungsten | Correct overheating, contamination, and tungsten type |
| Black tungsten after weld | Increase post-flow | Repair gas leaks and replace damaged cup/gas lens |
| Repeated balling on aluminum | Move to larger tungsten | Match electrode, amperage, machine type, and procedure |
Common Wrong-Part Mistakes
- Using pure tungsten on an inverter machine when lanthanated or ceriated would hold shape better.
- Using 1/16 in. tungsten for amperage that needs 3/32 in. or larger.
- Buying cups, collets, or gas lenses without confirming torch series and tungsten diameter.
- Trying to fix excessive balling by increasing gas flow until turbulence pulls in air.
- Using a balled tip because it was common on old transformer machines, even though the inverter setup wants a truncated point.
Compatibility Notes
Tungsten choice depends on machine type, AC waveform control, amperage, tungsten diameter, base metal, and procedure. Torch consumables must match the torch family, cup style, collet size, and tungsten diameter. If using WP-17, WP-18, or WP-26 style parts, verify the actual torch body and gas lens setup before ordering.
Related Failure Paths
- Arc wandering from a large or contaminated tungsten ball.
- Black tungsten from poor post-flow or gas leakage.
- Aluminum porosity from poor cleaning or shielding.
- Dirty weld starts from contaminated tungsten.
- Gas lens/cup failure mistaken for tungsten failure.
- Excess cleaning action overheating the electrode.
Safety Notes
- Let tungsten and torch parts cool before handling.
- Use eye protection when grinding tungsten.
- Use a dedicated tungsten grinder or wheel to avoid contamination.
- Follow shop rules for thoriated tungsten handling and dust control.
- Secure argon cylinders and use ventilation during test welds.
Sources Checked
- Miller guidance on AC TIG inverter tungsten selection.
- CK Worldwide tungsten electrode characteristics guide.
- CK Worldwide AC TIG aluminum setup notes.
- Weld Support Parts TIG tungsten discoloration and gas coverage support pages.
- Weld Support Parts TIG cup size and porosity troubleshooting pages.