rogersmithiii
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2012
- Messages
- 212
I have a chance to score a Lincoln 225 for $100 from a trusted party. I own a Hobart 180 MIG. Is the stick duplicate? Or are there cases where stick should be used over MiG?
Id say it depends what you are doing. If you do a lot of welding on greasy, dirty, rusty metal; stick is nice. If you do all of your work on clean metal, MIG is all that you need.I have a chance to score a Lincoln 225 for $100 from a trusted party. I own a Hobart 180 MIG. Is the stick duplicate? Or are there cases where stick should be used over MiG?
Some will, some won't. The invertecs I learned on will, Miller XMTs and whatever the tiny Miller is will as well.Inverter machine won't do a 6010 tho.
I run 6010 with my inverter a lot. What you can run is limited by the power available, not the type of welder.Inverter machine won't do a 6010 tho.
an expectation is an ESAB 161, they canInverter machine won't do a 6010 tho.
Inexpensive inverters tend not to have enough open circuit voltage (OCV) to keep a 6010 electrode lit.Inverter machine won't do a 6010 tho.
That is not what I use it for. It excels at cutting steel and especially cast iron. Soak it in water first.Inexpensive inverters tend not to have enough open circuit voltage (OCV) to keep a 6010 electrode lit.
More and more are being sold with the capability to run 6010 however. My Miller Maxstar machines have a setting specifically for 6010.
That said, 6010 isn't used much outside of open root pipe and plate joints, and if you're doing those welds, you know to have the right tools available.
For the home/farm shop, 6011 will do what 6010 does for the most part.
For the home shop, a stick welder represents portability, ease of use, simplicity, and the ability to change whatever metal you're welding simply by swapping electrodes and possibly polarity. DC machines are much more versatile.
In a home shop, you can weld stainless, aluminum, structural steel, rusty farm equipment, and whatever else comes in with the right electrodes.