flippin
Well-known member
I am in the process of building a new shop and another 40' bay for my bassboat. Part of the plan was to build my own Steevo specials with the Lista cabs which I have been collecting over the past few years. Relatively speaking I am a complete newbie when it comes to welding. I have experience with stick, mig and aluminum (spoolgun). My longterm objectives are to learn the craft sufficiently so I can build workbenches, welding tables, and aluminum parts for my fishing boats. I would like to weld both steel and aluminum up to 1/2".
Here is my question; A few weeks ago I found a 211MVP with less than 1 spool of wire burnt. The 211MVP was a stupid price and deserving of a "you ****". Yesterday I purchased an almost new Millermatic 252 with a 30a spoolgun. My plan was to set-up the 211 for mig, and dedicate the 252 for aluminum. I now realize that the 252 can have both mig and spoolgun set-ups simultaneously (haven't checked to see if I can leave both bottles connected) so the 211 is a bit redundant. Given that the 211 was nearly free, and we can never have too many tools, please help find a useful application for the 211 so I can justify keeping both machines. I am terribly impatient (I'm Japanese, we can't even wait for our fish to be cooked) and potentially lazy so taking the time to set-up a machine for a different process is less than ideal given my personality. If you were able to keep both machines how would you set them up to maximize efficiency for the type of welding I described? Different gauge steel spools on each Mig and leave the spoolgun on the 252?
Thank you in advance,
-Paul
Here is my question; A few weeks ago I found a 211MVP with less than 1 spool of wire burnt. The 211MVP was a stupid price and deserving of a "you ****". Yesterday I purchased an almost new Millermatic 252 with a 30a spoolgun. My plan was to set-up the 211 for mig, and dedicate the 252 for aluminum. I now realize that the 252 can have both mig and spoolgun set-ups simultaneously (haven't checked to see if I can leave both bottles connected) so the 211 is a bit redundant. Given that the 211 was nearly free, and we can never have too many tools, please help find a useful application for the 211 so I can justify keeping both machines. I am terribly impatient (I'm Japanese, we can't even wait for our fish to be cooked) and potentially lazy so taking the time to set-up a machine for a different process is less than ideal given my personality. If you were able to keep both machines how would you set them up to maximize efficiency for the type of welding I described? Different gauge steel spools on each Mig and leave the spoolgun on the 252?
Thank you in advance,
-Paul
