[AT] MIG welders
Dennis Johnson
moscowengnr at outlook.com
Sun Nov 15 07:38:00 PST 2015
I have a Thermal Arc Fabricator 3 in 1. It does mig, stick, or tig with a switch of a button and swapping cables and bottles. Mine is the 210 nominal size, but they also make a 180 size. This is a great welder I highly recommend.
At a shop I manage we have a Miller auto set mig, which works great.
I have a century mig at a cabin in Okla. it works good also.
I have a Miller inverter welder that I need to get repaired. Got it used and second time I turned it on I got a loud pop. Need to gather up funds and get it fixed.
Dennis
Sent from my iPhone
> On Nov 15, 2015, at 8:19 AM, ATIS <yostsw at atis.net> wrote:
>
> I personally have the Hobart Handler 175 and like it a lot. A skilled welder could easily get an inspection grade weld on 1/4" depending on the stock, conditions, etc. You can "tack together " much thicker. I have used commercial grade equipment and while it ain't commercial grade is it very handy and is plenty for my little shop. In fact I did some fairly tricky stainless that had to be water right about a year ago and was able to get everything adjusted exactly the way I needed.
>
> As Cecil mentioned gas is key. Flux core is less useful then one initially would believe.
>
>
> Spencer
>
>> On Nov 15, 2015, at 7:43 AM, macowboy at comcast.net wrote:
>>
>> Does any one have any advice on what to look for when purchasing a MIG welder? I am primarily going to use it for sheet metal repair and some light duty repairs. An occasional 1/4" weld is not out of the possibility. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
>>
>>
>> Jim Thomson
>> Rehoboth, MA
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