Wire feed is better for sheet metal. They are pretty much confined to the shop though. Stick is so much more portable.I'm surprised that they even sell for $250- what percent of people looking for a welder today want a stick machine? 1%? I guess if you're in a rural area, maybe farmers still use stick welders, but otherwise I'd think very low demand.
I have an old Miller 240V machine that I need to get rid of; I figured the leads were worth more in scrap than the machine. Maybe I'm wrong.
$250 is the max I would pay for that model for a used machine. It's an entry level stick-only machine, limited to 125 amps on DC and the leads are small diameter and don't reach very far. I don't see any extra money to be made flipping it. Go ahead and get the Primeweld 180 now and you'll be much happier.I was only interested in buying and flipping it for a few extra bucks if possible. Plan on getting a Primeweld 180.
Good luck with that plan! I don't believe it is worth any more than that.I was only interested in buying and flipping it for a few extra bucks if possible. Plan on getting a Primeweld 180.
Wire feed is better for sheet metal. They are pretty much confined to the shop though. Stick is so much more portable.
I got an inverter stick welder and it's extremely portable. Will run on 120v for short welds, 240v bigger stuff. Can easily throw it in the pickup. Kind of do anything anywhere.
I hope we all know that wire feed/ MIG > stick for sheet metal by now.
My Miller stick welder weighs 2-3X more than my Lincoln MIG. Both require 220V. I can lift and easily carry the Lincoln. I'd get a hernia trying to move the Miller stick.
Which is more portable????
The only place I've seen stick welders used in 40 years was in industry when welding high pressure steam lines. Yes, I realize they're used in welding pipelines every day, etc. That's what they're useful for. For Joe in his garage, not so much.
The company I retired from had many service trucks with MIG welders. They were mainly used for welding aluminum buss in substations, but the machines were multiprocess and could do stick, MIG (including flux core) or TIG. The reason they are not on some service trucks is that stick only machines are lower cost, can do most of the work that a service truck is needed for, and MIG is not a good choice for use outside shop environment because the shielding gas coverage is affected by wind. Inside a shop or garage, short arc MIG is fine for material thickness of 1/4" to 3/8" or less especially gauge thicknesses of sheetmetal. Though I agree that stick is more portable when you consider power supplies, gas cylinders, gun length limitations vs. longer welding leads on stick machines.Ever see a service truck with a mig welder mounted to it? I haven't.