I've been using a 40A carbon arc torch/mini-welder for 30 yrs to braze small stuff with. It's a Sears model that runs on 110v, and I can still buy the rods from Sears. Saw a similar 90A welder at a friends place last week & he didn't know what the salad-tong handle configuration was for, just like mine, chintzy-looking but easy to control the flame with. Gotta see if my rods work at the higher amperage before I get to wheelin' & dealin'.
It's the cats meow for, say bending threaded rod into quick & dirty squared u-bolts. Little to no fixturing/tweaking is needed, as such a small portion of the workpiece gets red-hot (right away) and it keeps the bend radius near to nothing. Great for straightening/bending tool handles when a lot of heat is needed in a small area too, but I'd like to snatch Joe's 90A for bigger jobs.
btw: An arc flame needs an arc hood/lens lest your eyes get UV burned like anything exposed would. Heh, you should have seen me that one time I brazed up a job that took an hour or so. I was still learning with it & working shirtless on a hot afternoon. By dinner time I was beet red from the waist up with a totally white face. :laughing: Just when I'm old enough to know better I find myself getting senile. It could happen again. :confused2: