Listen to Frank, he has some pretty good advice here. I used to weld for a living, mostly steel pipe with an arc welder and rod..... I did however quite often weld smaller stuff and thin "steel duct" with an oxy acetylene setup. We used to weld stainless steel for food grade piping and duct too with a TIG torch setup. I got pretty good. Just recently I helped my oldest son install an all stainless exhaust on his "tuner". All the old learned techniques came back in about 30 seconds, after about five minutes of welding with a TIG torch I was making some choice looking beads and swapping hands holding the TIG torch just like years ago. It's all practice and knowledge. The other thing though that is of crucial importance is good equipment. If you buy the cheap stuff, pretty much expect cheap looking results. I purchased a Lincoln 250 welder and a weldcraft TIG set up, got a very good flow meter at the same place I bought the welder and TIG stuff. It's now about twenty some years old and everything still works perfect, I just don't use it as much as I used to. The good part is the Lincoln 250 welder is worth more now than when I bought it because it's got all copper windings. The only thing I wish I had now is a good Lincoln wire feed machine and a high frequency box for the 250 so I could TIG aluminum. BUY GOOD EQUIPMENT, your kids and grand kids can use it after you don't need it any more. Armand ----- Original Message ----- From: "Frank Swygert" <farna@xxxxxxx> To: <amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Thursday, May 15, 2008 4:45 PM Subject: Re: [Amc-list] rust (welders) > I more or less agree with Mike. I have a cheap Campbell-Hausfeld 100V wire welder and it's fine for light things -- no more than 1/8" thick. So for rust repair on sheet metal it's great. BUT... I didn't get the cheapest model. I made sure mine was capable of using a gas bottle, not just flux core wire. When you opt for the slightly better model you also get four heat ranges. I use mine on the third setting 99% of the time. Flux core wire can be used, but the welds won't be pretty and will have lots of porosity (holes!) in them. So get out the grinder and weld over every pass at least once more to fill in the gaps, then grind some more to make it look presentable -- but still not like "pretty" welds. The bottle will run at least $100 over the cost of the welder, but doesn't cost much to fill. You can use straight CO2, but an Argon/CO2 mix is recommended for the 110V welders. With straight CO2 I'd be welding on the highest setting all the time, which wouldn't be a big problem b > ut would mean you have to let the welder cool down a bit between passes if doing a lot of welding. You can get good enough to make welds that need no grinding with the bottle, but it takes a lot of practice. I used to teach welding, but now by the time I'm making good welds I'm almost through with the job if it's a small one (10-15 minutes of weld time, maybe 5-10" of weld bead) before I'm making nice pretty welds again. Welding is 20% knowledge and 80% practice! You can know exactly what to do and still have to practice to get it right. > > So no, I can't recommend the 90A/110V MIG welder form Harbor Freight. They don't list the prices on the website for welders, which is strange (at least they don't load right now). They don't even have a 110V MIG, all are 220/230V. I bought my C-H from Wal-Mart of all places, but it works fine for what I do. I have easy access to a 200A stick welder at my brother's farm shop about 100 yards away, so don't need to have a HD welder. Think I paid a bit over $200 for mine new, then about $90-$95 for the bottle with the first filling of CO2/Argon mix gas. That was a few years ago. Here's a good deal from Northern Tools on one similar to mine, might be better built but who knows? > http://www.northerntool.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/product_6970_200342925_200342925 > Everyone who thought enough to write a review (some beginners, one listed himself as a "professional" welder...) seemed to like it. It's the LEAST welder I'd get, but if you have a 220V outlet you can get to (electric dryer in/near the garage?) I'd make a 20-30 drop cord (make sure it's #10 wire!) and get the 220V model. > > > > ------------- > Date: Wed, 14 May 2008 17:12:47 -0700 > From: Mike Kindle <mike90066@xxxxxxxxxxx> > Subject: Re: [Amc-list] rust > > If you get good at welding, there is nothing you cannot fix. In my opinion: > You will not get good at welding with the POS HF welder. There is not enough adjustability > and many you can't even hook up inert gas to. I have a chronically cheap friend who went this route. > I got to play with the HF welder a bit and it was bad. He then sold it. Don't waste your time. > > I got a used Lincoln 110 wire welder for a hundred bucks off craigslist and now I confidently > weld things with great success. I suspect it will outlast me. It is worth it to get a good > welder you are going to want to use, rather than a cheap one you are going to want to avoid using. > It is okay to be frugal. It is not okay to be cheap. > > -- > Frank Swygert > Publisher, "American Motors Cars" > Magazine (AMC) > For all AMC enthusiasts > http://farna.home.att.net/AMC.html > (free download available!) > > > _______________________________________________ > Amc-list mailing list > Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx > http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list > > > > -- > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG. > Version: 7.5.524 / Virus Database: 269.23.16/1433 - Release Date: 5/14/08 4:44 PM > > _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list