Cobalt Chrome Alloy electrodes are hard alloys that are resistant to all types of wear and corrosion and high temperature oxidation. That is, the so-called cobalt chromium tungsten (molybdenum) alloy or stellite alloy (stellite alloy was invented by American Elwood Hayness in 1907). Cobalt alloys contain cobalt as a main component and contain a considerable amount of nickel, chromium, tungsten and a small amount of alloying elements such as molybdenum, niobium, tantalum, titanium, niobium, and occasionally iron. Depending on the composition of the alloy, they can be made into welding wire. The powder can be used for hard surface surfacing, thermal spraying, spray welding, etc., and can also be used for casting and forging parts and powder metallurgy parts. Cobalt Alloy Blade electrode reduced iron powder is also effective in improving the deposition efficiency in addition to a certain stable arc and use in the cobalt alloy electrode. Soda ash is to improve the pressure-coating properties of cobalt alloy electrodes, and the added amount is 7-10g. Recommended: J421 is a carbon steel electrode of titanium oxide type coating. Both AC and DC can be used for all-position welding. It has excellent welding process performance, good operation performance, easy arc ignition, stable arc and beautiful weld bead. Uses: Welded low carbon steel structure, it is very suitable for small sheet metal parts and cover welding which requires beautiful and smooth weld surface. Most alloys have a melting point lower than the melting point of any of the constituent metals of the composition; the hardness is generally greater than the hardness of any of the components; (Special case: the sodium-potassium alloy is liquid, used as a thermal conductive agent in the atomic reactor, The conductivity and thermal conductivity of the alloy is lower than that of either component. With this property of the alloy, high resistance and high thermal resistance materials can be produced. In order to avoid this transformation of the Cobalt Alloy during use, virtually all of the cobalt alloy is alloyed with nickel to stabilize the structure from room temperature to melting point temperature. Cobalt alloy has a flat fracture stress-temperature relationship, but it exhibits excellent hot corrosion resistance at temperatures above 1000 °C, which may be due to the higher chromium content of the alloy, which is one of these alloys feature.