That welder costs new over $400.00 the tanks costs over $100.00 each the helmet cost over $50.00, so that being said you have gotten a very fair deal. As for the electrician friend I don't know where he came up with the whole breaker idea but I have been running all sorts of welders from a dryer plug for over 30 years. Just as the old guy had it running in his little shed out back you can too.
As for the point of the right welder, considering "you don't weld" you have chosen a tough welder to learn on. I say that because an A/C stick welder makes a pretty good welder look bad. D/C just welds so much prettier, in my opinion. Then a mig welder makes everyone look like a pro.
jm2cw
Current Smokers: Backyard RF Offset and Hybrid RF Offset trailer rig with Cowboy cooker and fish fryer, always room for more........
I looked up the Lincoln. It's a 110v model that most likely won't be up to the task. We have a 140 at work, and it's a terrific light duty welder but I don't think it will do what you want it to.
I agree with what RC said, I think you scored. My first smoker was built entirely with a Miller Thunderbolt 225. I had it over 28 yrs and maybe used it twice when it was new. Never really got the hang of it so it sat in the garage ALL that time collecting dust, overspray and wood chips. When I was infected with the smokerbuilder bug, it came out and despit EVERY obstacle I had put in my way, my first smoker and custom built trailer turned out fantastic.
I have some ugly but strong welds on that thing and the thoughts of it falling apart while a roaring fire was cooking away danced thru my head every step of the way. Add the vision of the trailer ripping apart on its travel to my first gig ...
Guess what, it starts to make more sense once I got started and I learned to fill in holes,set a really nice bead in place and control the sticks as these guys here guided me into the process. Eventually bought a Miller matic 211 and enjoy the heck out of it. My welds look really nice but I have had 5 smokers worth of practice in the last 2 1/2 years.
I did have a 50 amp breaker that I had installed for my compressor so I just tapped into that. My lights don't even blink. Start with some nice 1/4" scrap to just get the feel. I'm sure your gonna do well. I too am obsessed with this so you are not alone out there.
Make no mistake, there ain't no powder in this Puff ! And... I'm not really a crazy person but I play one in real life
Thanks for the write up Puff and RC. I think I will plug it into my dryer outlet have a go at it. I picked up some scraps at the local yard today to practice. It came with two complete sleeves of rods, so I've got plenty to spare.
I'll keep you guys posted and share some progress pics
Holy cow 10000w generator then you should go for Generac 20kW Generator.
I can say from personal experiance, that if you intend to do any fabricating where welding is involved, this is not the machine. I'll clarify my statement. I bought the Thunderbolt, and a 110 wire feeder at the same time, also a Miller. The wire feeder worked great, but certainly has a size limitation for steel thickness. Descided to use the DC to finish some small details of a project, maybe 10-15 minutes of actual running, or welding and the unit shut down. I assumed there must be a reset, but afterwards found it had simply melted itself down internally, all the "aluminum" connectors inside had gotten hot enough to melt the insolators that supported the terminals and shorted the whole unit.
I managed to make some emergency repairs, since the warrantee did no good for me, and now have a very limited tack welder for DC only.
If you need a good welder, buy a good one, if tacking a few things together is your final goal... Its a great machine. Duty cycle, duty cycle duty cycle.... Compare and save in the long run. "Just my opinion".
Holy Guacamole! I am surprised no one has commented on this yet. I thought a Miller WAS a good welder. Doesn't the thing have thermal shutdown circuits on it, or do you have to watch the duty cycle times yourself? Did Miller cover the problem under warranty? If a guy can burn up a Miller welder in its first 15 minutes of use, something is very wrong.
I would keep the tanks and you have yourself the making for a pretty good torch outfit. The helmet is a score also so I don't feel you lost anything in the deal.
Unfortunately, I don't feel you got what you need either. I would resell the machine or keep it for the really thick stuff once you get some experience under your belt.
Renting a machine is going to cost you as a smoker build is not a weekend project. Unless you have no other commitments, I would plan 3-4 months and that rent would buy you a machine. And I agree the home depot model is borderline too small.
Decide what you want and how long you are planing to weld. A good machine will last a long time and is worth the investment. I've had mine for 8 years and it has been worth every penny.