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Need a welder...help me decide!


Rural king is like walmart for farmers and country folk.
 
i think im gonna look into the hobart welders... either the handler 190 or the handler 210 for me. they look better and are priced better than miller.
 
agreed.. miller is GREAT stuff, no doubt. that's what we have at the shop. a nice 220 mig, i don't know the model tho....

but for the average person Hobart is awesome. more reasonably priced for the home user..
 
I was also thinking Hobart. I'm dead set on the Handler 190/210. They are priced competitively and supposedly Miller makes them.
 
The Hobart 140 is a good welder. It's the largest you can get and still use 110v.

You can weld thicker if you preheat the metal.

I have one and augement it with a 220v ac/dc stick welder for thicker stock.

An just so people know.....unless your gas welding.....it's ALL arc welding.

Stick welding uses flux on a electrode that creates a micro atmosphere
Mig (metal inert gas) uses a shielding gas to create a non-oxygen environment.
Tig (tungsten inert gas) is a tungsten electrode and uses a shielding gas.
All welding using electricity is arc welding.
 
All said, get the Hobart 140. It will handle most everything you'll do. If you need thicker, you can either preheat or do a multipass weld.
 
run Co2 on your 140 welder to get a little more oomph from it.
 
Ok PERFECT! I'm getting the 140 tomorrow from Northern Tool! Thanks guys!
 
i've got a lincoln 125. it'll do 1/4" plate all the way down to 22 gauge (i think, it's somewhere around there). i love it, works great. it plugs in to a regular wall outlet and i've even used it on a 25 foot extension cord. anything larger would be way overkill for what i plan on doing.

got it for $420 at lowes and then spent $60 on a auto darkening helmet.

i get my gloves from harbor frieght, they're 5 bucks, i've eventually get some better ones though.

i'm doing the same thing with mine that you're doing. i braced my drop brackets with them, built extended RA's and i plan on doing sliders/bumpers this fall.
 
I haven't got a MIG yet because I've been holding out for when I can afford a decent 220v rig. I've seen lots of people using 110v MIGs and I'm not impressed with their abilities for sticking anything more than a couple tin cans together.

I picked up an older Lincoln AC-225 stick welder awhile back. $100 got me the welder and a bucket full of assorted rods. Another $100 got me an oxy-propane cutting outfit (100 lb propane cyl and tall oxy bottle, oxy was full and the propane was around 2/3 full), guy was getting rid of all his dad's stuff. I can stick metal together with the welder and I can cut it apart with the torch, but I could use a lot more practice.

I'm far better at welding using the old school oxy-acet torch set my dad gave me. First time I played around with it I learned to do a good weld. My first weld was crappy with poor penetration but I went around and re-heated the weld and tried again. Then I realized that when it got heated to a point, you could see what everyone said about being able to watch the metal flow together. From then on, I was golden. (but lots of people are deathly afraid of welding using a torch and claim that it's extremely difficult).
 
Are you talking about Brazing? That is what i was always told it was.
 

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