RNeumann
Elite Member
I left it with both my cords. Funny thing is the guy on the phone told me the Tech told him "it welded fine on 230 but wouldn't weld on 110".
I suspect he has that backwards.
How come a "110" receptacle reads "122"? How come a "220" receptacle reads "244" (cause 122 x 2 = 244...duh).
I did ask the electrician about my service being higher than the 110/220. He said it is not unusual and that there is an acceptable range of voltage that everything should work in as consumers can't control what the electric company provides.
Kind of explains why the welder says one cord is for 120 V and the other is for 230V. I had wondered how one was supposed to make 230 out of 120 x 2.
It’s just old school slang. The goal voltage is 120/240v. Most and code would say that you should be within a few percent of that.
Btw- if I made/lost money for every correct/incorrect TBN diagnosis I’ve made I’d be up at least $0.05 after this one!!!! Haha