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TIG welders

Kapt

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 24, 2005
Messages
168
Location
Maryland
I'm looking for a TIG for home/hobbyist use. I'd like to hear about your positive and negative experiences with the equipment you're using. I've been looking at mostly Lincoln and Miller, but will consider anyone.
 
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1320stang

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Joined
Dec 28, 2006
Messages
4,563
Location
Edmond, OK
What will you be welding primarily? I understand that you can get good deals on them from an aircraft repair facility as the High Freq wears on them and they get new ones every year or so. The HF is used in welding aluminum but for welding steel, they're fine. They'll still weld aluminum, but not as good as a new one. My chassis guy told me about this, he had to get a new machine and he couldn't believe how much better it welded than his first one. He has both Miller and Lincoln.
 

sneezer41

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 8, 2007
Messages
407
Location
People's Republic of Mass
~10 years ago I bought a lincoln tig, comes as a package with everything but the bottle. It has been super, no problems. It has its limitations, 175 amps, mostly aluminum is tough for thick sections.
 

Graham08

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 10, 2007
Messages
713
Location
Iron Station, NC
Depending on your budget and space limitations, I would take a serious look at an inverter TIG machine. Lincoln's Invertec and Miller's Dynasty line. The nice part about an inverter is the smaller ones will plug into a 110 volt outlet, and are small enough they have a handle on the top to carry them around. A similarly powered transformer machine will weigh a couple hundred pounds, and require 50A or more input power.

I have a Lincoln Precision TIG 275. It weighs about 650 lb without an argon cylinder, and requires 100A input power. It is a serious machine, and I have yet to run into something I can't weld with it...new it is over $4000, though.

I have also done some welding recently with a friend's older Lincoln Square Wave 175 machine at his shop. I was pleasantly surprised at how nice a machine this is. You can pick these up used pretty reasonably...he has about $500 in his. It doesn't have all the bells and whistles of the newer Precision TIG series, but is a good machine.

I would recommend taking a look at Miller's site, www.millerwelds.com. They have an online forum (obviously skewed a little toward Miller, but not too bad) where this sort of question has been debated to death.
 

PAToyota

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Joined
Jan 20, 2006
Messages
4,366
Location
South Central Pennsylvania, USA
Miller Syncrowave 250DX with water cooled torch here... A lot depends on what you plan to do with it.

Aluminum? Other metals than mild steel? That is going to push your requirements up the scale from the base models.
 
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p-nor

Member
Joined
Jul 15, 2006
Messages
20
does anyone know about the new miller diversion tig machines? i get frequent emails from miller about new products and they just sent me one mentioning this new tig welder. sounds like it's for home use primarily and might be pretty cheap.






paul
 

VDubJoe

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 22, 2006
Messages
319
Location
New Port Richey , Fl
I bought a used lincoln tig 300/300 for 500.00. Its a big unit but its very robust. Welds anything and all parts still available.Works great. Found it on ebay.

Joe
 

goodfellow

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 17, 2006
Messages
2,288
Location
NoVA
I bought a used lincoln tig 300/300 for 500.00. Its a big unit but its very robust. Welds anything and all parts still available.Works great. Found it on ebay.

Joe

Same story; bought a late 70's vintage Miller Dialarc HF with lots of accessories (Miller cooler, Miller cart, Victor regulator, Weldcraft torch) for around $600. The older equipment is bullet proof and doesn't rely on any sophisticated electronics so although it's bulky, it's also pretty cheap to run.

Replacing circuit boards on new inverters is VERY expensive.
 

mike944

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 18, 2006
Messages
337
Location
Vernon, CT
I have a Thermal Arc 185TSW.

(current model) https://www.mythermadyne.com/thc/en...srcApp=&productID=10-3073A-2&tabName=OverView

I know a lot of people are going to give me a hard time because it's not a miller or lincoln, but it's just for a "hobbyist use" and not for hard production use. It's an inverter machine, and small and lightweight, and includes AC and high freq for aluminum. It was about 1K cheaper than the dynasty, when you consider the thermal arc comes as a complete kit, and the dynasty is sold as power supply only. It would have been nice to have the 110V power capability of the dynasty, but it wasn't worth 1k to me.

Thermadyne is more known for their thermal dynamics plasma cutters, but they made decent welders as well.

One more thing, if you don't know how to TIG, i would probably reccomend against an inverter machine. If you're learning, you'll probably be shorting out the tungsten quite a bit, and the inverter machines are probably much more sensitive to abuse than the "old-school" bulletproof transformer machines. I don't know this for a fact, but it's a funny suspicion of mine.
 

Vicegrip

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 9, 2007
Messages
1,187
Location
NoVA.
The Diversion is a basic limited adjustment and function unit intended as a stepping stone up for a hobby welder with basic skills. It is the inverter based version of the Econo Tig.

I have a transformer based Miller Syncrowave 250 runner. It is a good machine but I like to weld aluminum and would like to be able to run the Hertz up to get more focus, given a do over I would spend the extra $ and go inverter. With Tig you will always wish you had more adjustment.
 
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