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Technical
Which welder
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<blockquote data-quote="Happystamps" data-source="post: 583293" data-attributes="member: 14679"><p>I'd go an alternative route and start looking for good second hand welders, 150-180A. You get more flexibility out of them and they're much higher quality. You'll find that a 90A restricts you quite a bit and the wire feed is usually awful on them ;-) i found a 170A butters style job for £180 i think, it's much more reliable and gives me better welds. Couple it with adams gas or BOC(if you'll be going through bottles) argon/co2 mix and buy a light reactive mask. They're well worth the money.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Happystamps, post: 583293, member: 14679"] I'd go an alternative route and start looking for good second hand welders, 150-180A. You get more flexibility out of them and they're much higher quality. You'll find that a 90A restricts you quite a bit and the wire feed is usually awful on them ;-) i found a 170A butters style job for £180 i think, it's much more reliable and gives me better welds. Couple it with adams gas or BOC(if you'll be going through bottles) argon/co2 mix and buy a light reactive mask. They're well worth the money. [/QUOTE]
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Which welder
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