[AT] Update: '47 B - First starting attempt

Roger Moffat rogerkiwi at gmail.com
Wed Dec 16 05:41:40 PST 2020


I have one of those same welders - my father in law gave it to me more than 20 years ago. I have only used it a couple of times.

I also have a 170amp Harbor Freight wire/MIG welder that cost around $200 maybe 6 or 7 years ago. It works OK for what it is and how much it cost.

Roger

> On Dec 14, 2020, at 10:06 AM, szabelski at wildblue.net wrote:
> 
> I have an old Montgomery Ward 120V welder that I purchased as my very first welder. Used it primarily for doing simple small weld jobs. It’s a simple small box, about 1 cubic foot. It has an aluminum tube on the end of one cable that serves to hold the welding rod using a simple thumb screw. The other has a typical spring loaded clamp with an aluminum tube on the handle of the clamp opposite where the cable is attached. The neat thing is that you can insert the one rod holder into the other handle of the spring clamp. Then using two copper clad carbon rods that are about 1/4 inch in diameter, adjust the distant between the two carbon rods to create a flame that will literally melt steel. The only draw back is that as the carbon rods burn you have to readjust the distance as the flame reduces. The rods would last for about 10 minutes before becoming too short to work. Haven’t used it in probably 40 to 50 years and don’t know if the carbon rods can be obtained for it anymore. It was great for heating nuts that I wanted to remove without spending a lot of time and effort. Got them cherry red real fast. I also used it to heat metal when I wanted to bend something. I could get the area where I wanted the bend cherry red, and bend it by hand without using any tools as long as I had enough material to grab with a gloved hand. Had to be careful with small pieces since once or twice I started to melt what I was trying to bend. Now that I think about it, I may drag it out of the basement and play with it a little.

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.antique-tractor.com/pipermail/at-antique-tractor.com/attachments/20201216/2e984390/attachment.htm>


More information about the AT mailing list