CNC Dan
Veteran Member
Thanks Shield Arc, I cought that just after I posted. You were too quick for me.
Don't believe everything you read on the Internet. Mark takes very good care of us here on TBN!:cool2:I bet this welder isn't still $349
No problem!Thanks Shield Arc, I cought that just after I posted. You were too quick for me.
I got mine (PA200 ST- 120/240volt) a few months ago, and paid $400. , including shipping to the east coast.arrow said:Well if I'm understanding your post correctly Bukit, you may be saying that the PA -200 may exist as a dual voltage currently however it may not be on their website? If that may be the case, I bet this welder isn't still $349
I got mine (PA200 ST- 120/240volt) a few months ago, and paid $400. , including shipping to the east coast.
...like you, 1/16" makes me crazy as you need about a rod an inch. (exaggerating but it certainly seems that way) I'll get ahold of some 5/64's 6013 and see how that goes. I did look at the Hobart 210 last week and considered it but for $879, it is more than I care to spend. Plus the extent of my welding ventures doesn't deserve this good a welder. Here is the part that gets confusing. A true welder has not much good to say about the little 115 migs and I can easily understand why...
Well. I'll be danged!. You have the same anniversary as I do as a logger! To celebrate, i'm gonna weld two tin cans together and then go drop a tree on them.
I remember hunting elk and deer in the Olympic mountains, the way they clear cut there I'll bet looking down from an airplane it would look like a large wagon wheel. Only thing left was brush!
Oh God I hate these questions.Shield, how hot were you running these rods and were they 1/8"?
Thanks Shield. I do not know what it is to run a good welder. My machine runs so cold that it could never acquire this bead and will stick 14 times before it connects. So, this is what they mean as "a pipe dream"Oh God I hate these questions.Yes they were 1/8-inch rods. Now remember the pipe welds were made on small dia pipe, and were loaded with heat from the welds below, so I'd guess the 7018 cap pass was made somewhere around 110-amps, and the 6010 welds around 75 to 80-amps.
A
Again, though you are limited by total current and voltage in. Just for example...V x's A= Wattage. So if you have 115 v and 20 amps in...that equals 2300 watts. IF you are demanding say 120 amps at 24.8V (which is the volt/amp level at near max output) that equals 2976 watts. That's 676 watts more than you are putting in. Just not going to happen especially with some efficiency loss which has to happen somewhere. So to get more out, you have to be able to put more in. It's not something magic that can happen, we're bound by the laws of electricity just like anyone else. PFC can stabilize the spike demand and help out with unstable or fluctuating voltage if it dips a little low, but it will still require a certain amount of power at sometime.