There is a reason for that with these. You just cant wring more out of a small one. But they would be correct, a 140 does it for a lot of people and I might even be able to make it if I lived in the burbs. Better than no welder.No matter what you buy, somebody will ALWAYS say you should have gotten a bigger one.
I agree with this if a guy has some work for it. The machine portion of the price difference in this equation can make it worthwhile to step up. The 211 is a machine a guy could use a lot. I know a guy retired from the motors, bought 2 welding machines and gonna do it all. 211 and a Dynasty. 1200 decked out at the time and 5 grand. Used the 211 quite a bit and the Dynasty 10 minutes, 5 of it practice, coulda done the work spoolgun easier.A Hobart 140 would be my suggestion as well if you are going to be primarily doing the thin stuff, using it for sheet metal and light gauge steel to maybe 1/8", but if you plan on welding 3/16"+ (frame, suspension, etc welding) I would suggest stepping up to a bigger machine. For my car projects, my miller 211 has done everything I've needed of it, from thin rusty sheet metal to 1/4" single pass frame and suspension work. no one likes to spend extra money if they don't have to, and getting all set up with tank, helmet, gloves, wire, etc adds up, but its also a kick in the pants after you spend that money, to then not have the capability 6months- a yr down the line when you realize you need to weld on new axle brackets or something thick and you need to start farming stuff out for a job you could have banged out in half an hour. Be honest with yourself with what you'll be using the machine for. (I had a Hobart 140, and "outgrew" it / needed more within a few months and upgraded to the 211)
The Hobarts and the box store Lincs are very good. They are simple and don't have all the super features they use to drive the pricing up. 25 years ago I bought one from a dealer, 625$ and they still are only 700,,, same machine. The reason for all the gizmo stuff on them is they needed a price raise and the competition is so fierce that they couldn't get it up without some more bling. Dvi, auto set, auto track, spool gun ready, all that stuff.
They weld the same, the cheaper ones are single voltage, tap voltage and the operator has to set it. They weld very well though. I have 10 machines, the little red one is still my main one, do 95% of the work with it.