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LIDL inverter welder
Dropped into Lidl today for breakfast cereal and couldn't resist the
little 70 pound inverter welder. Looks very similar to this one from last year https://www.offerscheck.org/parkside...6/kw-18/285568 Doesn't come with any rods, so not been able to try it yet, but found this video of one which looks quite similar, which seems to work rather nicely. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VLk49_k5F0 Of course that could be down to the skill of the user! Will report when I have tried mine. |
LIDL inverter welder
"newshound" wrote in message o.uk... Dropped into Lidl today for breakfast cereal and couldn't resist the little 70 pound inverter welder. Looks very similar to this one from last year https://www.offerscheck.org/parkside...6/kw-18/285568 Doesn't come with any rods, so not been able to try it yet, but found this video of one which looks quite similar, which seems to work rather nicely. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VLk49_k5F0 Of course that could be down to the skill of the user! Yeah, bet it is. I taught myself with one of the 1970s massive great transformer based stick welders in the very early 70s and can do the slotted dexion square black tubing that plenty of the pros claim can't be stick welded. And then discover the roof racks that a mate of mine made for his landrover using 25mm RHS which has much thicker walls than the dexion tubing. What an obscene abortion. He used to be a farmer too, very agricultural racks indeed. Will report when I have tried mine. I must get one, much more conveniently portable than the massive great transformer based one I still have. Been watching for them at the garage sales but they dont last long and a mate of mine grabbed on just before I noticed it. |
LIDL inverter welder: first trial report
On 26/08/2017 21:01, newshound wrote:
Dropped into Lidl today for breakfast cereal and couldn't resist the little 70 pound inverter welder. Looks very similar to this one from last year https://www.offerscheck.org/parkside...6/kw-18/285568 Doesn't come with any rods, so not been able to try it yet, but found this video of one which looks quite similar, which seems to work rather nicely. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VLk49_k5F0 Of course that could be down to the skill of the user! Will report when I have tried mine. Welding rods arrived today, just had a quick play. Can confirm it is easy to strike and hold an arc, not much problem with sticking after playing with current settings. I'm not going to post any photos yet, but able to form a strong butt weld between two bits of dexion without blowing holes in it. Cables and fittings all seem good quality and long enough for convenience of use. Only tried 1.6 and 2 mm rods, will have to hunt around for some heavier scrap to try the 3 mm. If it continues to go well I will be tempted to invest in small TIG kit (I already have "disposable" gas for the MIG). Pretty impressed, really. |
LIDL inverter welder
On 26/08/2017 21:01, newshound wrote:
Dropped into Lidl today for breakfast cereal and couldn't resist the little 70 pound inverter welder. And a portable generator just in case the lights go out |
LIDL inverter welder
On 01/09/2017 19:39, GB wrote:
On 26/08/2017 21:01, newshound wrote: Dropped into Lidl today for breakfast cereal and couldn't resist the little 70 pound inverter welder. And a portable generator just in case the lights go out Already got one. They havn't had the wet suits from Japan yet https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cL7jyXCQ2Zc |
LIDL inverter welder: first trial report
On 01/09/2017 18:25, newshound wrote:
On 26/08/2017 21:01, newshound wrote: Dropped into Lidl today for breakfast cereal and couldn't resist the little 70 pound inverter welder. Looks very similar to this one from last year https://www.offerscheck.org/parkside...6/kw-18/285568 Doesn't come with any rods, so not been able to try it yet, but found this video of one which looks quite similar, which seems to work rather nicely. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VLk49_k5F0 Of course that could be down to the skill of the user! Will report when I have tried mine. Welding rods arrived today, just had a quick play. Can confirm it is easy to strike and hold an arc, not much problem with sticking after playing with current settings. I'm not going to post any photos yet, but able to form a strong butt weld between two bits of dexion without blowing holes in it. Cables and fittings all seem good quality and long enough for convenience of use. Only tried 1.6 and 2 mm rods, will have to hunt around for some heavier scrap to try the 3 mm. If it continues to go well I will be tempted to invest in small TIG kit (I already have "disposable" gas for the MIG). Pretty impressed, really. That's interesting. Is this like a standard arc welder but using an inverter rather than a socking great transformer (so much smaller and lighter)? |
LIDL inverter welder: first trial report
On 01/09/2017 22:28, newshound wrote:
Yes. It's not much bigger than a toaster, weighs I suppose about 3 kg. I think it goes up to 90 amps, claims to do 3 mm rod. Runs off 13A socket. I inherited a traditional transformer one some years ago, still ran off 13A but weighed at least 20 kg. I think it came with 4 mm rods but I could never sustain an arc, and I gave it away. Could it be that being an inverter that the output frequency is a lot higher than 50Hz? I remember seeing a TV program some time back where to weld certain materials more reliably they required 'specialised' equipment and then went on to state that the equipment welded at a higher frequency. -- mailto: news {at} admac {dot] myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
LIDL inverter welder: first trial report
On 02/09/17 09:56, alan_m wrote:
On 01/09/2017 22:28, newshound wrote: Yes. It's not much bigger than a toaster, weighs I suppose about 3 kg. I think it goes up to 90 amps, claims to do 3 mm rod. Runs off 13A socket. I inherited a traditional transformer one some years ago, still ran off 13A but weighed at least 20 kg. I think it came with 4 mm rods but I could never sustain an arc, and I gave it away. Could it be that being an inverter that the output frequency is a lot higher than 50Hz? I remember seeing a TV program some time back where to weld certain materials more reliably they required 'specialised' equipment and then went on to state that the equipment welded at a higher frequency. YIOu n3eed in practical terms some sort of step down transformer to done coincvert te volts and upconvert te amps. Running it at higher frequencies means its smaller. The limitng factroir of a transformer (as I tried to explain to that **** Clive Sincliar before he constructively dismissed me) is that the amount of power you can get through one is the amount of energy you can store in its magnetic field times the frequency of operation, and by going higher in frequency you can push more power through or have a smaller, transformer. (In the case of Clives hallucinatory product, the core size was fixed by his meanness, and the frequency was fixed by the TV line scan frequency, so there was nothing to be done really. He of course was in denial that he could be wrong about anything so that was that.) -- If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State. Joseph Goebbels |
LIDL inverter welder
On 01/09/2017 19:53, newshound wrote:
On 01/09/2017 19:39, GB wrote: On 26/08/2017 21:01, newshound wrote: Dropped into Lidl today for breakfast cereal and couldn't resist the little 70 pound inverter welder. And a portable generator just in case the lights go out Already got one. They havn't had the wet suits from Japan yet https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cL7jyXCQ2Zc They had those in tesco the other day. Rather cheap, too. |
LIDL inverter welder: first trial report
On 02/09/2017 09:56, alan_m wrote:
On 01/09/2017 22:28, newshound wrote: Yes. It's not much bigger than a toaster, weighs I suppose about 3 kg. I think it goes up to 90 amps, claims to do 3 mm rod. Runs off 13A socket. I inherited a traditional transformer one some years ago, still ran off 13A but weighed at least 20 kg. I think it came with 4 mm rods but I could never sustain an arc, and I gave it away. Could it be that being an inverter that the output frequency is a lot higher than 50Hz?Â* I remember seeing a TV program some time back where to weld certain materials more reliably they required 'specialised' equipment and then went on to state that the equipment welded at a higher frequency. Inverter welders, whether stick or TIG, provide DC to the arc. I guess that inside them they have a meaty switched mode power supply, i.e. with an oscillator running at higher than mains frequency which means that you need less iron and copper in the transformer, and hence less weight. Professional TIG welders have an additional high frequency supply which helps to initiate the arc, without this you have to "scratch" to start. Plenty on the web about AC and DC welding. |
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