Thinking of buying my son a mig welder. He is working on an old VW and will not be doing anything heavy. What you think about the Millermatic 211. Will work on 110 or 220. Can weld up to 3/8 steel on 220.
The 211 with auto set will make you think you are a good welder
Having a welding machine “for life” is fine and practical but there’s ALSO nothing wrong with a change of scenery or wishing to upgrade.
"Same as cars and women"
Not quite; it's never cost me NEAR as much to get rid of a WELDER or a CAR... Steve
The auto set is fine. The features were so they could raise the price. But for 700 or so can still get a basic with 5 speed ******, a Pro Mig 180 type. Not sure if Hobart still makes a 187? I should look at the product line. So much has changed in the last while.
Ya, I think so, a 190 can be had for 700 on sale. A 211 is dandy but 500$ more. Its not a deal breaker for some.
What about an Everlast welder? Once my shop is done, a new MIG and TIG will be one of my first purchases to replace my old Miller welders.
https://www.everlastgenerators.com/...products/fa57479c13567fb329297e46f4d9c802.pdf
Miller addressed pretty much every (mostly minor) complaint I ever had about the transformer version... Steve[/QUOTE said:Can you please expand on that a bit Steve? What did you see as shortcomings and what were the mods Miller made?
I see they changed language a bit for the new machines. They list the minimum ground as 14 and that would only apply if the power wires were 14. I think these are still allowed on a 50, the language and the listed breaker is somewhat confusing and still applies to the wire size. In other words the wire size is used to size the breaker.Follow electrical service guide for
240 VAC in Section 5-3. Do not use
plug rating to size branch circuit
protection.
