I've been using the Lincoln 210 mp, for a couple months now. It runs great, lots of 7018 and a couple 12lb rolls of .035. very nice arc, easy to set up, the wire feeder runs perfect, no issues at all.
I have a Miller Syncrowave 210 Welder, I bought the combo deal for just about 3000 out the door. It come with every thing for stick,mig,tig. AC tig has just a little more then basic setting for ac tig. Pulse, cleaning % adjustable, freq adjustable. its a inverter box so you can run 110 or 220. The miller rep was in the store when I was looking and stared telling me about all the difference between the welders. He stated the inverter power plant in side the syncrowave has the same part number as a miller dynasty but different software and different control panel. The Miller rep swore I could run it off a generator was a big selling point to me along with it can do anything I can throw at it. This is after 3 months of research and reading and watching every video I could find on the welders that I was looking at. And after much time spent This was my final choice.
this is the first inverter I have ever welded with and I can tell you it burns stick rods better then any thing I have ever used in my life. (witch is not saying much but its got stupid power on stick rods.) All the mig is done with a spool gun. so If your welding in tight spots might not be for you. I have welded up 1/4 steel plate very solid first pass. welder was set at about 22v. room temp was about 70 deg, and even after long runs of 2 minutes or more of solid welding the cooling fan would shut off pretty quickly after stopping. A few times I have even had it blow throw 1/4 plate, so I know I am getting good fusion or penetration.
I have built quite a few things using the tig And love the tig set on this welder. just messing around the other day when I was putting the 1/4 plate together. I cranked the welder to 200, pushed the plates together held a very close arc, smash the petal for a sec and the plate was spot welded very good, couldn't pull apart with your hands with out bending or smacking very hard with a hammer. that was only after a 1/2 second of power.
It was a lot of money and if I had to do it again. I would buy another one tomorrow if this one died. but is got 2 more years of warranty left so all good on this end.
I am just getting into welding some in my spare time (which seems to not exist lol) we have a miller 160 (I think???) at work that I have played with a little but have spent a good bit of time on a Lincoln 210 mp and def love it. just used MIG haven't had time to mess with stick yet but do plan on it. is it worth my while getting the 210 or going for one of the Hobart model 190.
Definitely get the best you can afford. Preferably a name brand, but don't get hung up on "tool snobbery". Basically make sure it can do what you want now and what you might want down the road.
Especially if you are married, you most likely are only going to get one shot at it, make it count ... then the purse strings get yanked shut tighter than a sharks arse and that's water tight.
Learning generally boils down to "Repetition or the avoidance of pain", some people learn by doing, some by watching and some just have to pee on the electric fence.
Whether you think that you can, or that you can't, you are usually right. Henry Ford
actually my wife wants me to get one haha she has "projects" that she wants made lol ohboy
right now I'm looking at either the Hobart 190 or 210 and the Hobart ac/dc stickmate lx 235 or just the Lincoln 210 MP... unless yall think id be better off with the two hobarts
not sure which one to get first. I can MIG and want to learn stick... now just waiting for rural king or tractor supply to put them on sale