good buy?

/ good buy? #2  
Do you have 3-phase power at your house? The link states that welder requires 3-phase power input. In the U.S. typically only large businesses have 3-phase power so a homeowner would be required to buy a phase converter to use this at home - which can be prohibitively expensive. Hence, The 3-phase power requirement would drastically affect the value from a homeowner perspective.

That said, that appears to be a lot of welder for very little money if you are lucky enough to have the 3-phase input power needed to run it. I doubt you would ever outgrow it from the welders capability perspective as it states a welding output of 375 amps which is huge and capable of running extremely big rods which most homeowners will never be welding metal that thick.
 
/ good buy?
  • Thread Starter
#3  
I do not have phase 3 power at home.
Sounds like it has more jam than I will ever need.
Thanks very much for the advise.
The hunt continues.
 
/ good buy? #4  
You can look into a used Lincoln AC/DC on Craigslist. I'd recommend something with DC welding capability but AC only is far cheaper for occasional farm use.

If you want to buy new a Everlast PowerArc 160 or 200 can be bought very reasonably. They are DC, 220V, and light as a feather (comparatively). Very easy to learn on and put down gorgeous welds with just a little practice.
 
/ good buy? #6  
Yes i feel it's worth it. You can carry on with it.
 
/ good buy? #7  
I agree that the Everlast Power Arc 200, is really forgiving. It was making better welds in a half hour than any weld I ever made on an AC buzz box.
 

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