It is more of a filler material, and a pretty good one at that, depending on the application. It works wonders on sealing say, a cracked oil pan. Cracked sealed, but also no real stress on the pan. The terminal end of that pipe where the weld would be, would get some stress. Be it from daily driving, potholes, or whatever made it crack in the first place.thanks horizonchaser. i havent used the nickel spray powder. is this more like a bronzing technique or is it essentially a type of filler metal? are u still getting a bead- a complete melt of metal on each side of the crack and having them flow together for a true weld? has the nickel spray powder worked for u on a repair like this?
You would get a complete bead all the way around, and with added layers to build up the height & thickness if you like.
Like Glimmerman said "these repairs are marginal". If it were a crack in the bottom of an oi[ pan, it would last forever but given the area of the weld in the exhaust pipe, with the "heat cold cycles" on that pipe, the metal could be really fatigued. The life is out of it, as we say in the cast iron moulds that we deal with.