TESTING THE WORLDS CHEAPEST WELDER! Only $10 dollars!
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- Опубліковано 27 лис 2024
- #CASEYSCUSTOMS #HOTROD #RATROD #KUSTOM #CHEAP #REWIEW #WELDER
I bought the worlds cheapest welder so you don’t have to! Let’s see if this $10 dollar machine can actually weld!
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no
just kindding
Try dragging right to left and see if that makes your welding more stable. I was taught to drag your stick instead of pressing it towards. If that makes sense. I'm not professional stick welder either but it sure helped me. I used to work a cement plant as shift maintenance, it was part of the job description. Making repairs to the pipe lines ect
What rode you using?
Wish you were local 😂
Come on now supporting Logan Paul with 5$ prime drink
Im a retired farmer, now a hobby welder! I have deligated my inverter welders to wallhangers in favour of my vintage 1975 Miller Econotwin HF AC/DC, i can use most any rod for stick welding and 150 amps is all i need.
That is amazing it even welds at all for $10. I have a 250 amp stick welder and a 70 amp hobby stick welder. I'm not great at either but my mig welder can weld anything. But for a cheap portable stick welder for limited duty it's worth a try. Thanks for the video Casey
Did you find the ad? I did not, don't think it is real for under $60.
@@tonysimpson8048it’s real, the price goes up but with temu you can get them with the saving coupons for about 30 bucks like I did today
@@tonysimpson8048 inverters can stick weld, it jut st makes the patterns. Nothen thick, thick
By experience, my advice is, move the stick more. Back and forth about a 1/4 inch in little horse shoe shapes. This spreads the heat more evenly and forces the puddle to lay more evenly into the stack of dimes look. DRAG the puddle rather than push. Shit i just gave up a secret that people pay a lot of money for school to learn.
It is appreciated
I follow "if there's slag drag" same for flux core mig
not what i learned in school but aigt, its fine. Only dabbled in stick welding industrial pipes 15 years or so, in 20 years i will be semi pro lol
thanks for sharing. dunno how we're gonna beat commies at manufacturing when they get marched into a place and told exactly how to make things, but we're busy keeping every 'secret' to ourselves. less crabs in the bucket couldn't hurt.
My advice is don’t take advice from this guy
4 isnt enough voltage, 5 is a bit to much voltage, but add the extension cord and the voltage lost makes 5 land right in the sweet spot. Makes perfect sense really
Ikr, that's what I was thinking.. now he needs to crank it on five and just change cord lengths to 'dial it in'...lol. Obviously the ground wire is also a big factor.
it's his outlet's contact, extesnion cable should make little if any difference, unless it doesn't provide enough current because the wire isnt thick enough etc, but not going to happen with this cheapo welder, what's going on with that is MOSFETS/Coils will cook quickly and stop working temporarily/permanently and be inconsistant, for brief quick stuff it should be fine, but the reason big arc welders weigh a ton is becuase they have big heavy copper coils(for a reason). Modern tech can negate some but not all of(the need for) that
For the duty cycle problem since the welder is only $10 buy 2 and alternate between the two every 10 minutes.
😂😂😂
I think you might need a few more to make that work
Yeah cuz you probably have to leave it off for 30 minutes if you use it for 5 , therefore you need probably like six of them
@@jessytinsley3285😂😂😂😂😂
That dial should be a potentiometer, which means you need to really play around and probably write your best settings down. For thin, try a 1/16 rod on 2 and go from there. You may actually cook bacon! (For those of you that don't know, a proper weld should sound like a pan of frying bacon). Looks like I'll be ordering one of these as well as those auto-gogglea!
I'm not even a welder and I agree. A smaller rod used on a lower setting would probably get more desirable results. I might even get one myself and give it a go.
@@williammessenger9637Can't hurt . It's a skill worth learning . Thanks man .
I started to teach myself to weld about a year and a half ago. At the time I could only afford a stick welder I picked up for around 100.00. First thing I welded with it... thin sheet metal for the core support on my 65 f100. Learned really quick how to manage the the heat with a stick welder to weld thin stuff ( after swearing a lot ). I can do it, but I dont like to.
Careful if you ever weld galv that shit will make you suck as a dog
@@bigasianman006 Oh Ive done that. Ground down the top coat of it but it still smoked like a chimney. Luckily I was doing it outside so there was lots of ventilation and there was a breeze.
Have you gotten a stitcher for those fender repairs yet? My uncle let me play with his years (actually decades) ago. Nifty 😅
@@bigasianman006if my pipe isn’t made from galvanized steel I don’t want it
@@bigasianman006 If you're going to weld galvanized you need to get a lot of calcium into your body. Drink a large glass of milk before welding anything that has zinc in or on it.
Dang every once in a blue moon i need to weld stuff in the backyard, i hate lugging my whole rig out back, this would be a an excellent solution
Most inverter welders will not weld low heat unless you switch to 1/16" rods. They also have extremely low duty cycles. That means that if you are doing a lot of welding, the welder needs to cool down for a while in between welds so the transistors don't blow up.
noob
Dear God what have you been reading
😂
A good inverter welder typically has a better duty cycle than a big transformer (cooling is problematic).
17 noobs thumbed up his post lol
Casey,
My wife bought a dinky little welder for me a couple of years ago. I think she got it for $80.00. It's about the size of a lunchbox (for you old farts that remember those) and weighs about 6 lbs. It's a 200 amp on 220v. Or, 160 on 110. It came with an adapter, a welding hand screen and a few other accessories. I thought she just wasted her money until I tried it. The cables seem to be heavy enough and it doesn't seem to have too bad of a duty cycle. Granted, on thinner steel, my welds are atrocious. But, I was very surprised that this thing works this good. I'm using 1/8" rod. Usually, 6011. It has a digital readout and goes down to 20 amps. I actually welded my exhaust back together with it. So, it was controllable on thin steel. I could have really used those glasses under the truck. I have my big 295 amp Hobart, but it's a tad heavy to move around. If you need to weld something that's farther away than my cables, you're screwed. So, the little welder has been getting a workout.
One thing on rods sticking, how damp are they? I have a barn that gets pretty damp, and those rods suck up moisture. They dry out after they get stuck a couple of times, and you can weld fine afterwards.
I'm a retired welder and I have something like this👍The reason they work so well is that they are DC inverters. When I was at work the pipe-welders had one of these that they didn't let out of their sight because it cost £4K and you could walk off with it.
@@melol6132
I have a couple of old buzz boxes that may get sold. They are just collecting dust.
For those of you saying that you want to buy this welder to "learn on"..... DON'T DO IT!!!
Save your money for a couple more weeks and buy a "decent" arc welder. Based on this video, I can tell you that you will HURT your arc welding skills more than you will HELP them.
Don't get this turd and expect to become proficient at arc welding. A good arc welder will operate completely differently from this machine. This gun is wayyy too buggy to learn ANYTHING!! You'll just get discouraged and think that you suck at welding.
Very good point.
I have one of those welders and love it , I payed more for it on temu but still like it , no problems out of it so far , I used 1/16 6013 rods on like 2 setting and does good on exhaust pipes but that is 3800 watts at full he is pulling alot of watts with it dont know what his breaker is but im only using 20 amp with no problem the lower the setting the lower the watts with the rod size I used the watts should be real low and the duty cycle should go higher because of the lower current draw and the trigger switch does make a difference to easily release when getting the rod stuck every so often.
Thank you for taking one for the team. I saw this on Temu for $89 and wondered if they are useful. I wonder if you can run it on a higher amp plug and it would do fine. My little HF Flux Core Wire Welder recommends 12AUG/20 Amp wall plug. I wouldn't get one because I don't weld much and it just seems too awkward.
I can't stick weld for sh*t using any 60xx rod. However, using 7014 I could pass as a pro welder. 60xx rod has a tensile strength of 60,000 psi. 70 is 70,000 psi. The tubing you are using is 65,000 psi. The only downside of 7014 is it doesn't weld overhead very well. Also, 7014 has thick flux around the rod. You can litterally lay the rod into a corner and it will lay a nice bead without stiring or holding the rod away from the metal.
I agree 7014 is the easiest rod to stick weld with and I can’t weld for sh*t either unless I’m using a tig or quality mig
Yeah 7014's make great welds as long as the surface is flat, as in parallel to the ground. If you just hold the rod about 45 degree angle, and push your hand straight down, pushing the rod in not trying to hold a gap, they make beautiful welds and the slag should just fall off by itself once cooled.
This is something that I definitely want to learn welding, and it feels like it's a great tool to start with and for 15 bugs definitely I'm getting it, thanks dude
I took a welding class and freaking loved it! Even though it was in the middle of August in Mississippi.... That was awful, class was great.
Well of course I jumped on Temu to grab one of these welders, but sadly the price I was offered was $95 dollhairs. I will keep my eye on it for sales maybe. I have a basic TIG set up now. But I'm a terrible welder, so of course Janky SKetchy Chinese Welding Equipment will help me out. Cant what to try this one out.
If you have a power inverter in your off road rig it would be handy to do trail repairs to get you off the trail.
Lower amp 120 v welders need to use 1/16" or 3/32" size welding rods at the very maximum to run well because you are usually limited to around 70-80 amps when powered from a regular 120v outlet. The more commonly found 1/8" welding rods need much more power and more amps to run right and not just stick the rod. With smaller rods 120v welders can weld pretty good on small stuff as long as it isnt over 1/8" to maybe 3/16" thick maximum.
Makes perfect sense, other than the fact this is a 220 welder.
@@CaseysCustomswhere do you get this for $10? This is a $60-$80 usd everywhere i saw...
I found glasses in the welding area at Rural King they were about $15 and I figured they would be good for dealing with spot welds and similar. I had a day where I spent hours driving into the sun well I threw them on and it made the drive much easier. So I bought a second pair. These are now my new sunglasses. They work great as long as I don't need to use a GPS.
Best way to let any welder cool down is to leave it ON and stop welding for a while, so the fan can do its job.
With a crappy welder like this if it's overheating, pulling the plug will probably cause really bad heat soak and could actually damage it. With ANY welder, just leave it turned on between welds, and for a good while after you're done welding, so the fan can do its job and cool down those coils!
The same method can be used to prolong the life of 1/2 drills when used to mix thick, heavy materials. You lift the paddles above the material while it is still spinning. With no load the the drill will start to cool by design compared to stopping in the material where the temperature will actually rise from the heat soak.
My brother has about the same one except its bright green and we welded his trunk latch back on and where it doesn't look great (we're not welders) it holds great for the amount of pressure in the trunk
I just got, I 'm learning. I used for a rounded nut, broken bolt, with good results. Thinking about the lawn tractor frame ( using a right angle bar with stamped holes for now ) also got a broken weld on cutting deck. We'll see. My first time using, getting use to the snap and settings
😂😂😂 yeah brother I used a bunch of these cheap ones
Seems like they all do nugget welds don't really matter about speed of welder Idk if gauge of stick matters but hey they hold though good enough for masonry scaffolding and we put a lot of materials on them boys
Hey y'all have a blessed day and remember Jesus is Lord ❤
It because it's missing all the regulators so the extension cord could actually be acting as a regulator😂
Them welders are $180 nzd now haha, with a discount, you've increased there value
If you have kids who might want to come into the shop and watch, these could be good for that.
Assuming it’s not for long periods of time and not up close.
Cheap enough to have a couple pair hanging by the door.
When I was down in Florida with the navy? Did sometime in a ship yard and they used to bake the rods for 24 hours at 300° and then a 1/2 hour before the welders came in. For their rides they would take a matter of the oven and let them cooh. Every once in a while a welder , which sticks around and he'd leave it there for thirty seconds because it was one of the rides that did not get dry. It is great to have a continuous duty welding machine. So I don't know how well that would work on that little pistol. Welder but i'm thinking about it.
And they tell me my stickout is too long… 😂😂
I’ve never had a girl tell me that, what’s the secret?!?! 🤣
@@CaseysCustomsbro these are 70 usd and up.. how you say its 10??
Smart review with a bit of comedy and frank up front conclusion ! Totally CooL as usual....I can Arc weld all day, gas I was okay at, never had to do it at work, I wonder if they should just make it a traditional box and leads set up, would be a small compact unit and by your review it's obviously fair kit !
20:30 you need to whip and pause back and forth on the thinner stuff to pull the heat back off of it. the thin stuff will blow out like that when you keep heat on it. also would love to see this do vertical welds like on sheet metal. im tempted now to use this as a lil field welder, maybe grab one for my dad for his cabin, this looks like it would run off of a 2000w generator.
I could see maybe taking this apart and putting all the innards into a little box with a fan. I'd switch the dial to a digital readout and find a way to set the amps with some buttons. Then you just switch the ground and stick lead to the traditional parts. Could be a good tiny diy welder.
Why would even do that 😑
The adjustment wheel is like any digitally controlled welder and like any welder you need a way to adjust the output, it doesn't feel like it's doing anything but it does. I have a small DC welder that's all electronically controlled and it's the same, not like the old transformer stick welders that weighed more than a dead body and it took hands like a pro wrestler to adjust the distance between the transformer windings to adjust the current output. I just looked on Temu and they want Au$116.49 (around $60 American) for this welder. Please voltage and amperage are not the same thing, put simply voltage is what allows the current measured in amps to flow. Different altogether.
Amps and Voltage are definitely NOT the "same thing at all!"
I laughed hysterically when he said that.
That would seem like it's useful for quick tack welds before using a real welder to finish the job.
I have one like that from Temu that is 115 AC Volts. It has its limits like metal thickness being the biggest. 1/4 in vh thick steel is pushing it. All in all it makes a good weld. Takes a little practice to get to know it's rod and steel limits and it's own characteristics
Did you pay $10, I can't find any including the one he shows for under $67. Is this even for real price?
@@tonysimpson8048He said in the video they come up occasionally on deal for 10$ but usually they are around 70$
Those glasses would be good for a welders helper or someone who has to work in close proximity to someone welding.
Saw guys in Africa wearing big wool hats with holes for eyes and dark shades for stick welding .
I have a Lincoln welder, but when I just need to tack someone under a car or whatever, this thing is perfect. Well worth its money for what it is.
For stick welders, lower settings are for different electrodes. If you're welding a thinner metal you will also need a thinner rod.
This would be perfect for a trail rig to carry along just in case you need to make a repair on the trail.
I think being a little welding machine it probably needed to get a bigger/ thicker earth cable, and having it shorter probably helps trying to welded thicker steel. I've got a welding machine that is designed to use a 15 amp fuse when welded a thicker steel. If it is running, throw a 10 amp power it will trip out the fuse because it's working too hard. That smaller machine is probably better at welding 3mm, 1/8 inch steel
Reality is its a $15 welding machine.. if you got 2 pcs. Of metal to stick with a stick machine you can adjust yourself n get good results.. as a welder myself I've learned the machine has a few workable adjustments but we have many..you keep at it and get better.. and I'm impressed by the Lil thing.. it fries bacon.. that sizzle is 2 pcs. Of metal becoming 1.. thanks for sharing
i really am amazed, i thought it was just a joke and that you had put a welding rod in a cheap drill
This would be perfect to keep in a motorhome for small repairs.
I can’t believe that you got that so cheaply, you were lucky not hurting yourself when you were burnt, I have a few scars that are in unmentionable places from using the low hydrogen rods and man they hurt. Best sticking to the Mig for the car panels.
As for using sticks, the rule of thumb is 40 amps per mm ( it’s metric system here in Australia), but will need tweaking if you overheat whatever you are welding.
Take care buddy, have an excellent day
You did have to catch yourself on fire for me to keep watching, but thanks....😂
As a boilermaker/welder for 47 plus yrs I would say this is ok but not great, but it'll do those emergency tack n small welding jobs when needed with a bit of Hassel lol, ive been welding with stick welding my complete career and I find it totaly weird that a 12 or 14 gage rod won't weld but a thicker 10 gage will, also shortening the earth cable does make sence for better amps carry but a too short earth socks, it's also weird how it welds better with a extention lol, but as a stick holder it's too heavy too, the metal on the bumper is usualy thicker and will weld OK but this thing will blow the boddy sheeting full of holes, for that I would rather use a inox or chrome rod because it flows so much easier making even a tack pretty strong and flawless, and by tacking away one can achieve an impressive weld on a car boddy with not so much grinding needed after, and its cooler and won't warp your job as much if you first put tacks here n there along a join before welding, but im sure you know that, lol I could ramble on all day regarding different welding techniques and skills and right tools and equipment and prep needed for any sort of weld,also those glasses are handy for tight spots or a quick tack job but ur face will get cooked with even 5 minutes of welding with them, and under a car your face is gonna get lotsa sparks and even into your eyes and from peronal experience there's not much worse that that 👀, but for 10 bucks I gotta say this is worth it for those quick little jobs n repairs but I'll rather pay a bit more and get a small inverter instead, I use a mid sized one in my home garage and it works great and I've built carports n gates n all sorts with it already and it's still going strong with no issues whatsoever, and any fine power adjustment you will need for anything from heavy jobs to finer jobs like welding on a car boddy n exausts n so on is available, but thanx for this review and because it's verry cheap I think I'll get one n try it out just for the hell of it lol ✌
The smaller rod is probably a 60/10 used for the root pass. The 70/18 or whatever it is is probably mild steel and used to cap the weld. It is softer steel.
use 3/32 6011 for thin material, play with settings, and move fast for the setting..
I did a lot of Arc welding on Thin Material working on the railroad.
7018 gives that nice buttery weld TEMU advertises..
I am looking for this immediately. These same welders on Ebay and Amazon are $120 plus the $10. Loving the build BTW!
its not $10
150 in canada@@phatkidd100
ya me to cheapest i found 70 $ aliexpress little fibbing going on here
@@THEVEETSyeah couldnt find under 70 usd what this guy talking about 10 usd for this?..
I think it welds better with an extension cord because of a slight voltage drop and amp increase when using a drop cord. Just my thoughts and thank you for sharing this video and testing for us
All a stick welker is, is basically a switch to connect voltage. Cut the end of your toaster, connect a welder rod to the hot and use the white as a ground it would weld if the breaker didn't trip. U can use a car battery and jumper cables in a bind too
Try using iron powder rods like 714 or 718
I think you were having trouble with the thinner rods because they were 611 and 610 these penetrating rods are sticky and tricky to use. 613 is probably ok too.
You got all the codes wrong 😂
I bought one & had to return it back when I went to use it the 3 time & stop working, it does not give the amperage that u need so don’t waste ur money on it , I got my self one that actually do the job u need
I have a Miller welder, but this would come in handy if I just had a small project or something quick to do.
The fact that it is even capable of welding is crazy
Very useful for the ten dollar price point! Impala back in the shop!!!
Really hope they bring this deal back, looks like it's around $70 right now.
Right, see these now for like $170. Probably sold dirt cheap til they got popular, now raking it in.
@@diggumsmack2was this actually 15 usd at one point?
@@multiblade04 Yes, I think because it was such an unbelievable tool, they had to get some out there, they probably were selling them at cost. I do remember seeing them very cheap and thinking ahhh junk. But I do have one now and it does perform.
@@diggumsmack2at what price did you see it? And on what site?
Are you burning 5/32 rods? wonder if it will run a 7018 .It surprised the hell out of me
As a Ag technician I would see the grasses being useful welding in tight spots inside combines.
I love all these welders commenting about how to improve a $10 device. It's a testament of how much bang for the buck that thing is.
My dad got one I think the same one it looks the same. He does small projects makes his own bull bars,rock sliders, bumpers ect all with a small "buzz box" and well it worked it was fiddly but did about 2 small projects then it burnt up oh also raised our electric bill by $300.00 +tax for the week it was working..
Yeah it' seems like them old harbor freight cheap welders. I still use it because its easy to move around but you have to have it on the highest setting to push some amps otherwise its not very useful.
9:50 It does better on an extension cord because that adds resistance that squeezes the electrons at a higher "flow rate". Allowing the coil inside to achieve peaks amps with less volts. That knob is meant for different thickness rods and material types. It's adjusting the voltage as that coil probably puts out 17-20 volts. That knob is a trim potentiometer same as a dimmer switch. It delivers the same amps at variable volts. 24 volts = more watts for thicker sticks, 17 volts less watts for thinner sticks on thinner material. Now I want one.
For a guy like me who is never welded in his life but have done soldering would this be a good welder for me to use and try to practice welding with what size stick rod work the best I might buy one of these
I got one, was $200, figured I would try, have not used it yet but this gives me hope
So maybe someone said it before me, but your right. the smaller gauge rod should have performed better. My question is, had you ever considered it to be a rod quality issue?
Maybe got damp/unused batch for a long time deteriorates. Also, maybe the smaller diameter rod isn't making good contact inside the welder rod clip? Just thinking because when you eliminate the obvious, there still has to be a reason right?
I bet if you put a new receptacle plug in the bench wall things will go better. The extension cord is not long enough to effect voltage unless it is only 16 or 18 guage.
I grew up in Lake St. Louis. My babysitter lived in St Joseph. Miss that area.
if it does ok on heavy stuff at 5 maybe use a smaller rod and setting around 3-4 for sheet metals? if its that lightly made then mostly for tacks and sheet metal maybe
i suspect that dial is a potentiometer setting the digital control. make sure it has clean wipers (grind it back and forth). try messing with it while its running, see if it jumps all over the place like it's a crap potentiometer like your sony walkman volume control had
That intro was outstanding😄
Sadly it was a pretty accurate portrayal of half the adds i see now.
7:30 - That thing has some attitude problems! I'm glad you weren't burned badly . Went right down there 😮 a little reminder to "step back" as you said.
Lol, yikes!
Cool weld, man! You got the job done. This is perfect for my needs. Thank you for doing this. Temu is something else. 😅
That’s the reason it’s running way too many volts, so running the extension cord actually helps it
I've used off the vehicle, lawn tractor. Is a car safe, if i used to tack up a new hanger bar on the exhaust. Should i disconnect battery, or how do i protect all electronics in the vehicle
You need to find the size of the magnetic field it generates.
Because its transformer is close to your chest when your welding.
Distance from a vehicle ignition system is 16 inches minimum and it doesnt have a large magnetic field.
I wonder if you did some more mods it would work better, open it up and connect the trigger switch to a foot switch, the tip connector replace with a regular electrode holder with thick cable, and same with the ground.
As a beginner I think this product will help me with basic I hope. Thanks for the suggestion
Thanks for introducing TEMU, since your first video about TEMU till now I can’t stop buying stuff from them..
And theyre in a lawsuit
lol ok let them
I buy WEEKLY.
When you cut the rod you took the flux off the end that's why it wouldn't arc up, it might be ok for tacking the odd thing up but the size of it is the main problem.
I've only ever welded with a stick welder and it's only been a couple of times. 😅 I do have other welders, I haven't welded with them yet. I think they need to do a little more product testing on those $10 welders! Thanks for sharing! 😁👍
Be great to get out of a pinch in a broke down off-road situation possibly as long as you had a genny around or high wattage inverter maybe…
In High School I did a pipe weld just like the one you did. Then I had the smart thought to turn on the gas into the pipe hole filling it with gas...... then light the pipe end....POOOOOOOP!!!!!!!!! My ears went deaf for a long time and my shop teacher came bye looking for the source to the sound, but somehow by Gods mercy the teacher passed by my welding station and didn't catch my bright idea. I learned about Gods mercy, gas and fire that day...... a little about lip reading too. All good now...but, oy vey.
I for sure thought that thing was a pie e of scammers junk, but now I could see myself buying one
Awkward was my first thought when I saw it, and that welder attached to the stick makes a pretty large chunk of stuff to have to wave around. Second thought was if you spend $10 for that for a once in a while weld you're probably such an inexperienced welder you're going to produce a weld that will hold about as well as Elmer's wood glue and look even worse, or you're a welder buying it on a lark. But for $10 it did seem to work for some probably very limited use cases and you sure can't beat the price. Let us know if it still works in a year, my guess is you'll pull it out at one point and it just won't work.
Really cool! Wish I had this when I was rebuilding my cabover Peterbilt.
Thanks for the review. I am not a welder but would like to at least learn the basics. Thought this would be a complete fail. Nice to see it isn’t although seems to finicky. Anyone suggest a good beginner welder?
Maybe it's the bench ? It's not grounded like objects off the bench with a lead cord to reach them. That's the variable in the test.
I’d cut rods in 1/2 ! So not as long from work piece and easier control! Just an idea
With the price jacked up I'd go with harbor freight. I've only machine shop welded as needed when the full time welders were busy they'd always say my welds look good this probably fries itself before it gets a chance to heat up the ends of the romex at home as a safety feature
I bought one used to be a bum in the streets of LA ,now I work at NASA welding the boosters to the frame.🎉🎉🎉
One of the best
Intros on UA-cam great video
I used to be a 3g stick and wire certified welder. No way would I wanna lump that big ass thing around.
TOTALLY AWSOME VIDEO CASEY!!!! THANK YOU FOR SHARING THE FACTS ON THE PRODUCTS YOU USE ON YOUR BUILD. THAT IS ALL IS ASK. GIVE ME THE FACTS ON ANY PRODUCT. .
Thank you for your help on this video, I know nothing of welding and seen this gun for sometime and wanted to try it out on small projects. you made it look so easy and provided great info , like cuting the ground shorter and the rod to use. if i find it for this cheap ill get it. as i mentioned i know nothing of welding perhaps a few pointers before i get in to this stick welder would hughly help.
again thanks for the vid Brotha.
You can weld with ANYTHING as long as there are enough AMPs, and you can short the thing out without blowing a fuse 😄😄
I did notice that when your dad was welding and it would stick he would not let off of the trigger. I’m betting that is why your ground was so hot because I noticed he was squeezing it pretty tight when he was rocking it back-and-forth trying to get it unstuck, and if you have somebody using it again, make sure you tell them if it sticks to let off of the trigger.
the R&D , though probably minimal probably lead the engineers of this little device to design it for the more common 32 rods
Would you trust the welds this makes on a roll cage or suspension piece? BTW - Temu is now at approx $66 on this.
and now is $105.28