Welder question

   / Welder question #1  

VA MTN MAN

Silver Member
Joined
Mar 15, 2011
Messages
101
Location
Virginia
Tractor
kubota m5700
I am thinking about buying a 115 volt welder for home. I have done a fair amount of welding at my shop before Retiring with a ac dc buzz box 225 Lincoln I think. I dint have a good place to wire and set that welder up here so I am wondering what to buy. I mostly want to weld small projects or repairs from time to time. No heavy thick repairs. Will the small wire feed welders weld up to say 1/4 inch steel. Core wire or gas? any opinions brands type etc would be appreciated.

Thanks
 
   / Welder question #2  
For what you are wanting to do, a flux core 110 unit should suffice. I have a 220 MIG at home and a 110 flux core at work. I am maintenance at a school. Most of the jobs at work I do with it, it handles them well (usually broken basketball hoop brackets, playground equipment, etc). It would also handle most of the jobs I would throw at it at home too, but the bigger machine has came in handy on occasion.
 
   / Welder question #3  
i have a hobart handler 140 that operates on 115 current.i use solid wire with a gas bottle. it does a good job on thinner metal and not bad on 1/4" metal.i like to make sure parts are clean and free of rust before welding.i also have an older miller 300 amp stick/tig machine i use on heavier work
 
   / Welder question #5  
I have a little Lincoln Pro 140 (120 volt)that i got from Home depot for about $500 if i remember. It works with AR/CO2 gas and it does a great job up thru 3/16, and a soso Job in the 1/4" range. I was tempted to get the 220 version at the time, but i need to use it around the ranch using 120 volt outlets. the 220 was not convenient.

I have been real pleased with the unit. Does a great job on horse panels, water troughs, Welding broken hold down bolts on winter water troughs, etc.

I have an ac/dc reverse polarity stick welder for the heavier metals.

Some day ill buy a nice 220 volt Hobart mig welder, but even then i wont part with this nice little 110 unit
 
   / Welder question #6  
I'm going against the general consesus here I'm afraid.
Myself, the only thing I'd use a 110 mig for would be body metal and up to 1/8and on that they do an excellent job. Anything over that you're maxing the machine out with the risk of lack of fusion.
Stick with the brand names, Lincoln, Miller, Esab, Hobart and you'll be ok. Go for .023 hard wire with argon/co2 gas. If you have access to the soda fountain co2 cylinders or co2 fire extinguishers, you can adapt them to a flowmeter, it'll save you having to get a contract for something that you may not use enought to justify the extra $$$.
Straight co2 will give you slightly more spatter and a bit more penetration...Mike
 
   / Welder question #7  
I have 2 MIG machines. The favorite is a Miller 211. If you think you might have access to 230V in the future, you might consider it, with it having the ability to run on either 115 or 230. Some consider it one of the best values on the market because of price. Mine, with a spool gun, was about $1k.

I also have a Hobart 140. It's also a good machine. I leave it set up with flux cored wire and use it when I want/need to weld outside the shop or near an open door in the summer. All you need is a heavy extension cord and a 20 amp circuit. I use it on anything from 11 gage up to 1/4". You just have to remember to give it time to cool when welding the thicker material. You'll probably want to switch to solid wire for thinner materials.
 
   / Welder question #8  
I wouldn't trust a weld made by one of those things with my worse enemy's life anywhere safety is concerned.
 
   / Welder question #9  
I wouldn't trust a weld made by one of those things with my worse enemy's life anywhere safety is concerned.

When i first got my 110 mig welder i had never struck a arc before in my life. I read over the manual than came with it and went to town. One of the first things i did was weld two pieces of angle together to test the weld strength, since i really had no idea how it would hold. After about 5 minutes of beating the crap out of it with a sledge hammer i came to the conclusion that the weld wasnt ever gonna come apart. The angle iron was mangled pretty good, but the weld was still solid.
 
   / Welder question #10  
I wouldn't trust a weld made by one of those things with my worse enemy's life anywhere safety is concerned.

oh, why not????
do you mean a small mig welder, or any mig welder?
 

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