Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Ideas: Buying my first welder

Ideas: Buying my first welder







An informative and practical guide for DIY




Millermatic 180







You might be the originative type. Or, maybe, you just like building and fixing stuff. You have the handy knack. Perhaps, you have your sights on opening a repair shop. Classic car enthusiast, fabricator, farmer or rancher - there are many occupations - you jsut like to be able to repair something instead of tossing it out.




This article is about the Millermatic 180.




Irrespective of your interests, needs, or determination, you’re a do-it-yourselfer interested in buying your 1st welder.




Whether you already have previous welding experience, or, you’re a welding beginner, you are probable here since you demand some help getting started.




Getting Started




Regrettably, there is no one welding process suitable for all applications, so let’s start with an overview of the introductory processes and highlight the capabilities and advantages of each. This will help us better fit a process to your specific needs.




If you have previous welding experience, feel free to jump ahead. If you are somewhat of a novice, this section will provide you with a better understanding of the types of welders available, how each performs and degree of welding skill needed to operate each.




MIG Welding




MIG welders apply a wire welding electrode on a spool that is fed automatically at a invariable pre-selected speed. The arc, created by an electrical current among the base metal and the wire, melts the wire and joins it together with the base, producing a high-force weld with heavy look and little need for cleaning. MIG welding is spotless, easy and can be used on either thin or thicker plate metals.




MIG are very easy to learn and can create hugely clean welds on steel, aluminum and stainless. Both types possess the capacity to weld materials as thin as 26-gauge.




• Easiest process to discover




• Great welding speeds potential




• Superior control on thinner metals




• Cleaner welds possible with no slag to clean




Millermatic 180




MIG welding process is ideal for general maintenance and patch up, farm and ranch applications, home repair, and auto body. Key features sole to the Millermatic 180 include:




•Auto-Set - A breakthrough control that automatically sets your welder to the proper parameters. Auto-Set offers all-in-one MIG minus the guesswork. Only set the wire diameter and material thickness and you’re all set to start welding.




•Standard Built-In Solid-State Contactor Circuit — Makes wire electrically "cold" until trigger is pulled. This makes the unit safer and torch easier to position earlier starting to weld.




•Thermal Surcharge Security — Shuts down the unit and activates over-temperature light if airflow is blocked or duty cycle is exceeded. Perfunctorily resets when fault is corrected and unit cools.




Tuesday, January 11, 2011