Markfothebeast
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2016
- Messages
- 419
I've only really taken a quick look under the top cover. I'm not familiar with the design of this type of "plug-in" stick welder. It looks like each of the transformers windings are tapped for different output currents. What confuses me is the battery charger function. How is the AC current converted to DC? There must be some type of old school bridge rectifier circuit in there.
Someone had obviously replaced the cord. The neutral wire appears to be wired as a hot leg, unless I'm looking at this wrong... The 120v outlet on the front has the neutral wired to the ground. I'm planning on replacing the 3-prong cord with a 4-prong and wiring the nuetral and ground separately.
Would it be appropriate to replace the 120v receptacle on the front, wire it to a hot leg, and separate the ground and neutral? It'd be handy to use the outlet.
The story behind this is that it apparently "caught fire" but I don't see any fire damage, at least from what I saw with a flashlight in the dark. It was used in a barn and sat close enough to open doors that it was in the elements. I wouldn't be surprised if there's poor enough resistance that a wire was smoking.
So today in the day light I plan on getting a closer look and test the windings/wiring and clean it up. I'm looking for a bit of insight on how these function. Perhaps there's a manual or wiring diagram out there? Any rough idea of its age?



-Markfothebeast-
(www.youtube.com/markfothebeast)
Someone had obviously replaced the cord. The neutral wire appears to be wired as a hot leg, unless I'm looking at this wrong... The 120v outlet on the front has the neutral wired to the ground. I'm planning on replacing the 3-prong cord with a 4-prong and wiring the nuetral and ground separately.
Would it be appropriate to replace the 120v receptacle on the front, wire it to a hot leg, and separate the ground and neutral? It'd be handy to use the outlet.
The story behind this is that it apparently "caught fire" but I don't see any fire damage, at least from what I saw with a flashlight in the dark. It was used in a barn and sat close enough to open doors that it was in the elements. I wouldn't be surprised if there's poor enough resistance that a wire was smoking.
So today in the day light I plan on getting a closer look and test the windings/wiring and clean it up. I'm looking for a bit of insight on how these function. Perhaps there's a manual or wiring diagram out there? Any rough idea of its age?



-Markfothebeast-
(www.youtube.com/markfothebeast)



