Fucker is SOLID, I can drag the quad around by it. While the welds are not the prettiest I build this "cage" from 3/8 round stock to protect the LEDs I added to my quad. So remember to factor in the cost of a bottle of Argon/CO mix. I had no desire to mess around with that stuff, not sure why not rated 6010 at over 150 amps, dont have to use special switch or plug for 6010 it just runs if under 150 amps on 230 volts. The Lincoln Electric unit comes setup for flux core wire. runs 6010 at 150 amps or less on 230volts. I run it off a 20amp circuit that is essentially dedicated. It is adequate for learning and small repairs around home, and the occasional P+W job. Weld calculators are handy references for weld parameters, electrode/wire type, basic techniques, and process information for TIG, Stick. The calculator will help you tune your machine for optimal results based on a few simple questions. Have a 120/220 MVP machine it’s a Hobart 210. But Hobart, Miller and other American Manufacturers use good 30 amp switch. Most Chinese 120 voltage welders have a weak 20 amp switch. A 120 volt 30 amp is 3,600 watt will work great. Can't find any compare of HP 170 vs Titanium 125. Get your weld parameter settings right from your iPhone with the Miller weld setting calculator app. 2.1 Wire Spool Installation / Wire Setup 3 Basic Welding 3.1 Front panel controls 3.2 Interior controls 3.3 Weld Settings 3.4 Duty Cycle (Duration of Use) 3.5 Setting up the Weld 3. Re: Flux Core / current vs material thickness. The Harbor Freight 170 welds like my Miller 750 just smaller. Weld a wide range of materials with fast, easy set-up. I try the the 120 voltage size and it just flip the breaker a lot. This all-purpose multi-process welder handles MIG, Stick (DC), TIG (DC), or Flux-core welding. The 170 is a 240 volt and the 125 is 120 volt. I feel a welder (even a cheap 120v) is something everyone should own and learn how to use for minimal repairs. Re: Harbor Freight 170 flux core vs Titanium 125. It's not the perfect set up be allows me to make repairs and tackle small projects. This is the one I had given to me (not by the above poster), the 20 amp circuit resolved all of the above issues. Power to the wire was ON-OFF-ON-OFF-ON-OFF to avoid tripping a breaker I assume.īut the wire runs out as long as you are pulling the trigger.Ĭouple that with the fact that you cannot see what you are trying to weld (even with an auto darkening helmet) and it gets frustrating. Understand that the 110-v model was intermittent: not a continuous electrical feed to the tip. ![]() That would make welding and dialing settings a lot more difficult. ![]() Still having a hard time dialing in settings. ![]() I never could get the wire feed rate to synchronize with moving the handheld part. Using 0.030 wire on the Titanium Flux 125. I bought a Lincoln one-a MIG wire welder with core flux.
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