I was thinking something like a unisaw is quality enough it might even be better than it needs to be. Its specialized enough, bit like an air comp that most people bought them would consider service to it as part of the package.
I got a 120V sitting here and have been using it for mufflers on the hoist, havnt unhooked my normal machine from its home in a while and have enough cord on it all the time that I can move it around. One of these days gonna add another 10 ft but its not really a problem as I am willing to do anything about it.
Whoops. sidelined. I know I asked but did the uni come with a ready made factory cord. 3 hp is likely designed for a 30 circuit. It could come 12 wire 30 end I believe. This is a really good argument about not using the minimum for a welder. A traditional 30 outlet would use 10, if using it for other than a welder the minimum wire is no good.
Whoops slid away again. If it comes 20 end factory then thats the circuit its sposed to be on and technically have to insure any wire ahead of other protection is suitable for short circuit and load calc. I would say 14 controls, its something I might consider with shared circuit. If you gonna run it on a shared it needs plug changed, 3 hp is legal on a 6/50 and since its a motor and not a welder would really need 10 wire.
As the man above me said,,, probably not a big deal but factory 240/20A is in some way similar to 120/20 in that same size wire ratings apply to short circuit and loading. Consider a power strip to some degree, added to a duplex, could feed thru 20 on one side and 15 to the other, would overload the breaker but can adjust the thermal on the breaker, say 15A but all the **** is still designed for 20A short circuit and really does rely on it for that and not that little thermal button.
You can run a lot of **** on a strip, a comp or chop saw, never trips those, will trip the panel breaker on starts.