Would a spool gun work? Are you planning on doing mostly aluminum and thus can justify the Rolla Royce solution or just some where a spool gun would do the trick instead?
That doesn't sound bad for a push pull setup, my spoolgun was almost 1200. I have a larger miller, but I have been eyeballing a 252 for a while.
I wish i could use one before i buy. I really want to see how well they spray transfer!
I have a 251 and love it (had it for 9 years now). I used a 252 for a year and it definitely has many upgrades such as timers, ergonomics, and the dials remind me of Lincoln dials in the way they adjust voltage and wfs. The spool setup is a little different too. Great all round welder.
If you want push pull go to the 350 line. You will pay more converting the 252. The 252 also has many of the upgrades the 350 line has just no push pull.
Damn youtube doesn't have a single video of 252 spray transfer!
I'm guessing not many setup a 252 for spray transfer. My understand is it will do it, but its on the edge of its capacity.
I would think it could handle it fine for shorter welds. The duty cycle might not like it much.
If it was my money, I'd look for a used 350p. You don't have to pulse, and it has the balls to weld for longer time periods.
However if you just can't swing it, the 252 should work fine for 90% of your welding needs.
Just get the right gas.
What are you people welding that a 252 can't do capacity wise? If your a dedicated fab shop welding heavy plate 12 hours a day, I can see a use for a 350 or bigger. For 90% of the general public, a 252 will do everything. Maybe my experience with the shop 250 is schewd because it is a 480 machine.
So who has one here? What are your likes/dislikes?
I'm planning on buying one with a Xr-Aluma Pro 25 push/pull
Would like to know how well it will spray transfer on alu/steel on material 5/16 to 3/8s.
thanks guys![]()
He asked specifically about spray transfer, particularly with aluminum. That is at the top end of a 250 class machine, and will tax the duty cycle. It's what the 350 machines were built for. It's not really about maximum capacity, so much as running within parameters that the machine will withstand long term.