em14
Platinum Member
Thanks for the info ...
Leo
Leo
I've been looking for a short time, and there seems to be a huge difference in price between some of the name brands vs. some of the off-brands. For instance, Harbor Freight has a Chicago Electric (their house brand) 35 amp plasma cutter with a 40% duty cycle for $899. A similarly-equipped Miller or Lincoln (or even ESAB) is almost twice as much.
There's also a 30 amp plasma cutter that's a discontinued Chicago Electric model on Ebay right now at what looks like might be a pretty good price.
Specs on both of these say they will cut up to 3/8" steel plate. At this power-level, should I expect the cut to be really neat, or jagged and ugly?
Does anyone own one of the Chicago Electric plasma cutters? Any problems with it? I started my welding experimentation with a $150 Chicago Electric flux-cored wire feed welder, and it was pretty crappy. I replaced it with a small inverter-based Chicago Electric stick welder, and I'm pretty impressed with it. I have an ESAB Heliarc 161 AC/DC TIG welder now also, and I love that one machine! I'm thinking (based on the quality of the CE stick welder that I have) that these seem to be reasonable levels of quality, at least plenty good enough for home workshop. I favor the inverter-based devices because they tend to be small and lightweight, and usually have low current draws compared to their transformer-based counterparts...these characteristics are important to me in a home workshop: I can run things off a 30-amp 220V dryer circuit.
Anyway, please share your experiences if you have any.
Thanks!
Dave
For instance, my Thermal Dynamics Cutmaster 38 is rated for 3/8" cut, but it will not pierce 1/4", so for above 3/16" you must start the torch from an edge or existing hole. The cut quality in 1/4" is not that great, pretty slaggy. To cut a 8" diameter hole in 1/4" material required three sessions, due to the machine stopping to protect itself from heat buildup. It will cut for about three minutes continuously at full power, then must have a minute to cool.
From my experience, whatever they rate the unit at, cut that figure in half for what it will cut fairly cleanly. Also, consider duty rating. For instance, my Thermal Dynamics Cutmaster 38 is rated for 3/8" cut, but it will not pierce 1/4", so for above 3/16" you must start the torch from an edge or existing hole. The cut quality in 1/4" is not that great, pretty slaggy. To cut a 8" diameter hole in 1/4" material required three sessions, due to the machine stopping to protect itself from heat buildup. It will cut for about three minutes continuously at full power, then must have a minute to cool. On thinner materials, (90% of my "work" is in 14 gauge, 0.078", stainless), the quality is excellent. FWIW...