Zeke
Well-known member
Same here plus 1 more suitcase stick.Hobart 190 set up to MIG and a Lincoln 140 set up for flux core.
Same here plus 1 more suitcase stick.Hobart 190 set up to MIG and a Lincoln 140 set up for flux core.
And if you learn the PN junction, you'll understand why inverter based welders are superior in every way that really matters.if people juust study ohms law for couple minutes they understand which welders is good. it like the mid eihty when the camero came out with the four cyllinder. look pretty but totally worthless
Airco Dip-Cor 300, big beast but it welds great.
Nice setup.Miller 2010 XMT304 mpm.
Bought new...love it. Hundreds and hundreds of hours doing tig and mig big and small.
company bought a esab, multi, dont know what model. its ok but easy to confuse so I know another worker will break it.ESAB 215ic Multi-Process
Just about any mig welder can do that, nothing unique about the miller.However, I just read a Hot Rod magazine article about Miller inverter welders and their capability to weld steel, stainless and aluminum. Tempting, but haven't researched models and cost.
I'M having a hard time thinking of a any modern multiprocess inverter machine that is AC only. There are some DC only ones that I ruled out because I wanted to do aluminum, but I don't recall seeing any AC only. That said I also went with a standalone TIG/stick and someday will do the MIG welder as a second machine.I dunno. When I was looking at multiprocess machines I saw that most were AC only. Based on my research I came to the conclusion that it would not be ideal for MIG or fluxcore.
Kept my cheap Lincoln MIG and got a Primeweld 225 AC/DC TIG (which will also do stick)
You're right, I totally misread the specs on the Eastwood the OP had posted, but it's DC only, not AC like you said.I'M having a hard time thinking of a any modern multiprocess inverter machine that is AC only. There are some DC only ones that I ruled out because I wanted to do aluminum, but I don't recall seeing any AC only. That said I also went with a standalone TIG/stick and someday will do the MIG welder as a second machine.
Budget is very likely a factor, it sure was for me. That market has been changing fairly quickly as far as prices and features the last decade or two as well.You're right, I totally misread the specs on the Eastwood the OP had posted, but it's DC only, not AC like you said.
It was a while ago when I was looking. Could be that the multiprocess that could do AC and DC were out of my budget
Just about any mig welder can do that, nothing unique about the miller.
My cheap yeswelder mig 205B can weld steel, stainless and alum.
Those magazines are just shilling for the mfger who drops money on ads in their rag.
no.Yes, most MIG welders can weld aluminum, usually with the addition of a spool gun. Are you trying to say that all MIG welders are inverter welders and have the technology described in the Hot Rod article? My research has not found that to be the case.
primeweld has a good name for good reason, they are good and support is strong.I am leaning this way, I have read lots of good things about them
Inverter welder, it wouldn't have cared. Find something with local support and go.I used the heck out of my dual volt Millermatic 211, small machine but it worked well. Had to sell it for the move (the 50Hz would have killed it), and am trying to find an equivalent small machine here... Then again, I may just bite the bullet and get a TIG/Stick machine this time around.... I can already stick weld, and I like the clenliness and adaptibility of TIG over MIG...
Any recommendations from anyone here on the 230V50Hz side of the world?
