I don't want that large of a cabinet, and still no place to store my welding helmet.HF has a new 27x22 cart
I don't want that large of a cabinet, and still no place to store my welding helmet.HF has a new 27x22 cart
HF has a new 27x22 cart
I just hang my hood on the bottle, I have a helmet bag / sac that stores the helmet the hang it on the bottleI don't want that large of a cabinet, and still no place to store my welding helmet.
How can you say, "I know" and not know where to shop? Knowing is more than believing. Be pepared to pt out a lot more $$$ when you think you have found your dream box. The retailers are often not forthcoming with the county of origin.I have no issue buying an imported cart. My point was doing a Google search, or looking on Amazon and a few other places all that shows is the same imported carts. I know there are a handful of small US manufacturers and am trying to find them.
I don't want to leave an expensive welding helmet just hanging out in the shop. Right now it gets put inside a wall cabinet, but I would like to store it in the welding cart.I just hang my hood on the bottle, I have a helmet bag / sac that stores the helmet the hang it on the bottle
You would need to make fabricate a bottle stand / rack - although pretty easy to do.
I sold tools for a few years. I had a customer call me and had me special order a welding cart. I forget where I bought it, but it was US made and not a huge amount of money. I don't recall the name of the company. I did contact the guy I sold it to, and he said he was going to take a look at the cart and let me know. I am holding off until I hear back from him. I find it hard to believe it is the only USA cart manufacturer, but maybe it is.How can you say, "I know" and not know where to shop?
I will help you look. I hope this works out, for you.I sold tools for a few years. I had a customer call me and had me special order a welding cart. I forget where I bought it, but it was US made and not a huge amount of money. I don't recall the name of the company. I did contact the guy I sold it to, and he said he was going to take a look at the cart and let me know. I am holding off until I hear back from him. I find it hard to believe it is the only USA cart manufacturer, but maybe it is.
So, yes I know US made cart were available a few years back, I assume the company is still around. I just don't remember the name and thought someone here would know of something other than the run of the mill import carts. It seems like most things get answered here so I assumed someone would know.
Mentioned already. High price for a imported, HF quality cart.



Years ago I thought of wiring up a four wire, 10 gauge cord and mounting a small four circuit breaker panel on my welder. Two breakers for 240 volt for the welder and two 120 volt outlets for grinders or lights. One less cord to drag around the garage.One of the best things I did was to build the extension cord into the cart - this is much better than keeping track of a separate cord!
I think I'd be inclined to just put a 120v receptacle next to the welder receptacle and tape or zip tie a 12/3 extension cord to your welder extension cord. A breaker panel is a lot of bulk and complexityYears ago I thought of wiring up a four wire, 10 gauge cord and mounting a small four circuit breaker panel on my welder. Two breakers for 240 volt for the welder and two 120 volt outlets for grinders or lights. One less cord to drag around the garage.
I don't think it would be that big of a deal. You can buy a six circuit breaker panel for $30. They are less that 12" square. Mount it to the welding cart, on the back or side, out of the way. Run wire to an 120 volt outlet on the front of the cart, and one on the back for the welder. Once installed you will never notice it.I think I'd be inclined to just put a 120v receptacle next to the welder receptacle and tape or zip tie a 12/3 extension cord to your welder extension cord. A breaker panel is a lot of bulk and complexity
I have a 4 wire extension 50A (240/120 volts) cord I used for charging our Tesla back in CA; if I plug this into a 50A outlet, the only breakers needed on the cart would be 20A for the 120V outlets, since the 50A 240 GFCI protection would be provided by the breakers protecting the 50A outlet the cord plugs into. The 120V breakers could be in a small breaker box on the cart. I'd use the cart for storing welding PPE, grinders, etc; some of the welders would be on their own carts/casters; my stick welder weighs over 400 lbs already. I've often ended up welding on stuff that doesn't fit on the table. Basically, this ends up being a welding cart with a built-in spider box.Years ago I thought of wiring up a four wire, 10 gauge cord and mounting a small four circuit breaker panel on my welder. Two breakers for 240 volt for the welder and two 120 volt outlets for grinders or lights. One less cord to drag around the garage.
True! I was over thinking it, except for the GFCI part. But I would only need one or two 120 circuit breakers.I have a 4 wire extension 50A (240/120 volts) cord I used for charging our Tesla back in CA; if I plug this into a 50A outlet, the only breakers needed on the cart would be 20A for the 120V outlets, since the 50A 240 GFCI protection would be provided by the breakers protecting the 50A outlet the cord plugs into.
I ended up buying the Harbor Freight welding cart. The one with three drawers and a hatch in the bottom.
Eastwood has the same one as the Metalman cart for less money, but still over $300. I decided the hatch was good enough for the $150 difference in price.






Yeah the wheels are, well, adequate. I figured before I bought it the wheels will get changed out to a larger size, but figured I would try it first.. At least the main body is all welded. That should keep it square and on one piece longer.i've had that cart for quite a while, i like it. i did replace the front wheels with better ones, rolls much better now.


