Here’s the list of products reviewed. More details in the video description. Thank you! Latest Model Lincoln: amzn.to/46pDbuY Yeswelder: amzn.to/44gFGPR Azzuno: amzn.to/44cmWRv Warcking: amzn.to/46ADN1R Flameweld: amzn.to/44A6OJv Vulcan: Available at Harbor Freight Chicago Electric: Available at Harbor Freight
Thank you! 7 welders reviewed in a 15 minute video is a very challenging task. It'd be much easier to make a 1 hour video on all of the welders. Thanks again!
"I just went out and bought 7 different mig welders" Is the greatest opening line to a video of all time. The testing this man does is just absurdly good. Unbiased, fair and honest. That's why this channel is easily one of the best on UA-cam. Well done sir!!!
It's a great day when project farm and welders are together.A plasma cutter review would be great too. I got burned on buying a cheap plasma once and would love to see how the other ones stack up.
NO.1 independent Product testing channel on UA-cam by far. These awesome product reviews are so in-depth you can take the knowledge and purchase these products with some of the uncertainty taken care of. I personally have bought different products after watching some of these reviews.
I dont think anyone can deny the quality of Lincoln welders. But for the price, I love my Yeswelder. They are a company that was founded via kickstarter and have ALWAYS listened to their customers (via facebook groups, online reviews, etc). Thank you Todd for the testing!!!
I mean, I've always been team Miller when OTHER people buy them, I feel like they're nicer machines, but that's like saying you like Mercedes more than BMW when you drive an old Honda. I only have a tiny stick machine I got off Amazon.
Can deny the quality of lincoln welders when your workplace has standardized on them and you have to use them every day. My home miller, at less than half the price ($4k), comfortably runs circles around them. Inconsistent wire drive speed, nonsensical errors (such as "power supply not connected), and badly designed plastic parts.
By far my favorite part of your videos is the fact that you don't outright tell people which product to buy, and you just lay out the bare performance for people to make their own decisions from. Thanks for your efforts, Todd!
Yep PF realizes that what might perform the best might not fit the needs of the consumer the best. Just as a $200 welder might not have the best customer service/build quality for commercial use, a $2000 welder might not be used to its full potential in a consumers shop.
Thanks for another stellar review, Todd! As a welder with 25+ years of experience, I will say that what you get out of buying Miller or Lincoln machines is great customer support. Pick up the phone and a tech can walk you through a repair, or you take take it to a local dealer for service. Not so with the Chinese stuff. Had a problem with the control board on an Everlast PowerMTS 251 welder at my last job, and getting in touch with anyone was a joke. They emailed me a PDF that looked like it was drawn up by a 5 year old, and when I had a question about clarifying some of the ridiculous crap on their drawing I couldn't get anyone to call me back. I ended up leaving that position before we ever got a resolution on it. With welders, buy them cheap enough that when they break you just throw it away, or save up your money for something blue or red and keep it forever, fixing it along the way. There really isn't any middle ground unless you want to be constantly frustrated. My two pennies, anyway.
Funny, lately I've seen some of the Red and Blue customer and warranty work being very poor. Wrong parts installed... No offering support. It was the reason i ended up going a different route.
Well, you are paying for the tech support at $2250 vs $360. How many YesWelders can you buy for $360 for the price of one Lincoln? And its not like the worker in the US is getting any decent medical benefits like in Europe, either. We are paying workers here nothing but overcharging customers. What use is the tech help if the parts are another ripoff, eh? I'll get the Chinese one.
Yeah I retires from my production welding job with only 16 yrs experience. We used these huge millers. During all that time I managed to learn almost nothing!
@@mjremy2605 If you're just gluing stuff together, I can see your point, but I can also see from the video and my own experience in the machine shop I work at that those cheapo Chinese off-brand welders aren't going to pass any kind of certification.
I’m a 23 year old that doesn’t know much about anything. Your videos have taught me SO MUCH. It may not feel like it sometimes but you’re helping people every time you post. Thank you.
Keep learning man. Don't just watch videos but get hands on with stuff and do the work. It's the best way to learn even if you mess up. You will learn from mistakes.
I love the recent adjustment in your videos to frequently include expert opinions. Of course we trust your thoughts and experiments Todd - but bringing in experts like Virgil is the next level!
@@ProjectFarmdo you have a long list of video ideas? How about scour the internet forums a bit for the best homemade peentrating oil. I.e. Atf + acetone mix, brake fluid, etc. That could even be just a short form video.
@@Its_Captain_Jack_Sparrow it's really wild how much technology has come huh. We've got a 90's Miller that set us back a TON. Now they can fit that into a $500 machine
Honestly, as a welder I can take any of these welders and put them through their paces. You have your hobby welders then your industry welders. Respect for your honest review. It all depends what you need to weld.
Those aren't all hobby welders just because of their price. That Vulcan Welder is superior to all the welders from Miller and Lincoln that cost 5 times the price. More durable, more features, easier to get a better quality of weld, and better duty cycle. Miller and Lincoln are resting on their laurels from long ago. Just like shitty ass snap off tools.
live in Canada an worked production welding on the line for years an i have a cheap canadian tire flux core mig an for around the house it's all i need for 200 bucks on sale , dunno what the duty cycle is but it's yet to shut down so figure 100% an welds aluminum to so what do you want you going into business or welding an exhaust up with the odd body work , imo
@@openroadtrucking6562 I weld every now and then. Actually use a Vulcan tig welder. Works pretty dam good. The one I have it the one Lincon was taking Vulcan to court over. Have met a few welder who prefer Vulcans over Lincons and Millers. Have also met welders who are vary biased towards specific brands.
Hardly comprehensive. No Millermatic, let alone any Miller brand welder was included in this test. That's a huge oversight that renders this whole thing pointless, IMHO.
Wonderful reviews as always. I love that Todd brings his knowledge of thoroughly testing products to welders, while also admitting that he's not skilled enough to test himself, so he gets a professional to do the welding and evaluate the results.
If you mentioned it I missed it, but replacement parts and consumables are also important to consider when shopping for a welder. A better welder can be repaired instead of being disposable if something happens, meaning a better welder can be cheaper in the long run and nicer to use.
The repair part is partially true, but the problem with the new inverter machines is, if a board goes out and it’s not under warranty then you may as well buy a new machine. So you can spend say $2500 on a newer Lincoln machine and fry it, or you could spend $1000 on a Hobart/vulcan/insert other “cheap” brand and fry it. Key is getting a machine that has a good warranty and take care of it. This is my view as someone who sells the red and blue machines for a living
@@TyStone80 Or buy something like the yeswelder at $400 with its one year warranty that performs damn near as good as the lincoln at $2500+ and in a year weather it frys or not buy another, point is you can buy 6 of the yeswelders which carrys you one year past the lincoln's 5 year warranty and you will not be stuck with old technology when the newest comes out or take a major kick in the pants when you try to sell your 5 year old lincoln because you want to upgrade to that newest technology, also the new lincolns and millers are not anywhere the quality they used to be as far as durable, that went away in welders when they went away from transformer to IGBT inverter design,,, nicer and easier to weld with yes but more prone to taking a crap hell yes but that's the trade off, for the average joe occasional home hobbiest weeked warrior welder a 2000$+ welder make abosolutely no sense whatsoever not with some of the high performing low priced options out there, you want a welder that will kick damn near any welder by miller or lincoln or esab right square in the A**,,, even the more comercial line offerings by those,,, check out the primeweld mig 285 it is a top performing built like a tank machine for under $1100, miller lincoln and esab are for guys that just like to piss away money to get an ego stroking and an A** reaming.
Keep up the great work! Not only are you unbiased and willing to test, but you're humble enough to bring in a specialist when testing products outside of your expertise and ability. Thank you for continuing to be among the great testing channels!
My friend has owned the Vulcan welder for about 5 years. That thing is a beast. It was even flooded at one point and was let to dry well, and its still going strong. The automatic function is cool too, you put the type of wire and wire size and set the dial for metal type. It does a pretty good job at autosetting. Overall great video, cool to see how some welders are bad and sometimes its not the person welding badly.
I asked for this video a little while back, and you completely delivered. From the bottom of my heart, thank you. I never knew what those smaller welders would deliver, and you definitely put a nail in that coffin. Once again, awesome video. 🙏 Thank you. 💕❤️🙏
I love these comparison videos! I would love to see a "is new really better?" type of series where you compared brand new units from retail vs used units from the popular used sites like FB marketplace and ebay.
Whenever realistic I choose pre owned but it's luck of the draw for how much life is left in it. If it was better by design it's still likely to be better than single use junk.
Neat idea. I imagine there’s so many variables with used products- if it’s been modified and how well it’s been maintained/treated, if it’s been abused, how much usage it has…
This is why it's important to support one's like this that pays all out of pocket for these expensive tests the average Joe could never afford! Love the work, my dude! Love your hard work and enthusiasm in all your work!
Thank you for doing this video. Nobody has done this type of in-depth review of welders. The amount of time, editing, and cost to do this must have been insane. It definitely helped me make a decision.
I looked seriously at the Vulcan several years ago. At that time it was a DC welder only and not capable for AC to run aluminum. By the time I priced two Vulcans(DC unit and AC unit with MIG and TIG) with the necessary accessories to get what was needed they were within just a few hundred dollars of the Miller Multi-process 220 with everything included. Ultimately I bought the Miller. Every time I run the Miller the grin under my helmet is huge. It does everything I need and does it well == at a higher price point than any of the ones you tested. I have always subscribed to the "Cringe once - Grin many" method of buying tools. Having been a licensed and degreed aircraft mechanic for many years, as well as licensed in motorcycles and many versions of small engine equipment, this mind set has served me well if not not inexpensively. Having an expert welder to consistently run the units and give commentary was extremely helpful.
As a gear head that rents shop space with a buddy, we’ve had a Vulcan 220 for like 5 or 6 years now, such a good value machine. It’s been going on flawlessly for the amount of use we do with it, for home garage work, it’s perfect
I was thinking about picking one up someday. I have the Titanium Easy Flux 125 welder and that little thing surprises me. It performs well once you put some decent flux core in it. Great for small around the house things and small projects.
I have the 220, it's nice, but the biggest annoyance is they didn't run the gas solenoid that the mig uses in tig mode, So it's pedal start but the gas has to be manually turned on and off. Like it's not bad considering the machine at all, but like it couldn't of been that hard to make the gas solenoid for both mig and tig.
I second this. Since they sell them as a feature, and increase the price as a result, it’d be good to see which ones really work. Doing automotive, I need to do Aluminum & Stainless at times.
Yes! I'd love to see the multi functions as well. I'll be purchasing a welder soon to learn on, having welding options is something I don't know if I need or don't need for my intended type of uses.
Great video! I've been running a Lincoln weld pac 140 HD 110v for 6 years. Not only has it paid for itself but I've done jobs that should have been done with a bigger 220 welder and you cannot beat the portability with flux core wire and ease of use. Keep up the great work!
Great work as always! I appreciate that you try both the cheap and expensive and compare them both head-to-head as well as taking into account their price. I don't expect a $300 welder to work as well as a $2300 welder, but if it can do a decent job for the occasional welds, then it's great for hobbyists like me.
The truth with welders is for diy and hobby the cheapest is as much of not more than you need as for the expensive ones you need to be an expert to make use of the added features because that who there for
@@sirreus3003 The Esab Rebel's are pretty good too. I've been a journeyman for close to 15 years now, used team red, and team blue. Have team yellow in my garage because they are close enough to miller or lincoln for my home use. I don't get all the features but enough of them and at a lower price. I also don't feel like I am welding with a piece of garbage either, that I am working around vs. just working with.
I am a welder and have been for a decade now. Favorite test so far. I personally have a Lincoln electric 200 Tig welder and it really is a fantastic little machine ESPECIALLY for a 110 capable unit. Expensive stuff for a beginner but a good addition to a mechanic shop.
@@aaronneher4860 im 60 brother 😳. In the 80s before the all mighty computer . If you went to the library like we had to do . The literature clearly stated we are Weldors . Its just one a them things that didnt get passed on to the internet 😒😒😒😒 Its the first thing i teach new helpers ! Be safe brother !
Nothing beats my grandpa's very old and very sketchy welder. Against all odds, 13 major hurricanes, and being thrown around by a tornado, it still works. Now that his workshop is being cleared out due to old age, i got to claim his immortal deathtrap and give it a loving home
@@connivingkhajiit I restore old Emerson brand fans from around 1920-1935. They can weigh upwards of 35+ pounds and are packed full of thick chunks of metal. Nothing was made to cut cost. Everything was made to last, and when finally worn, it was easily replaced. I have a 102 year old brass six bladed fan that funs like new sitting next to me now. It's been used by others for 85 years and me for 15 more. I have went through several Walmart generic fans out in the garage, they last two or three years. Most Emerson examples today need work, but most can be restored to fantastic running condition. There are actually lots of people like me and most have even more antique fans. I alone have over a dozen fans about 100 years old that run great. There are SO many antique fans that are in such good mechanical shape. That is A LOT of rambling for "they don't make them like that" comments. I just wanted to give a detailed example where I know it is 100% absolutely true. Don't even get me started with 100 year old axes. The short of it is any axe from 50 years ago is better than any axe today. :(*** Ok, to end this essay. That fan next to me that will probably run another 100 years. Well, it cost $37 back when it was new. Adjusted for inflation it's over $650!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Imagine going to checkout at Target with your new fan, some milk and deodorant and the total is $700. ;) Inflation and many other things basically make it impossible to manufacture this way. We are in the age of value priced shit and must struggle to find anything of decent quality.
A welder purchase is in my very close future, mainly to teach myself how to weld on small home owner type projects. I'll be referencing your videos heavily when making my purchase. THANK YOU for your consistent HONEST reviews. Truly a gem of you tube. The best if there ever was one.
Incredible , I just spent a day and a half comparing wire-feed welders on Amazon. I had actually pretty much decided that my needs the Azzuno would be right for me. This just confirmed it. And a huge Thank You to Virgil for his professional assistance in making this video. Well done guys.
When I buy something like this I know I can't afford the best one But don't want to buy pure shite that doesn't do what it says on the tin 😊 Todd's opinion is where I start if he has a video on what I'm looking for 🤗👍🇮🇪
Really impressive how good those value options are, but the consistency you get from the Vulcan and Lincoln Electric (not to mention the RANGE from the Lincoln) really demonstrate what you're getting for the price. Love the video, keep up the great work!
I discovered yeswelder about 3 years ago and have 2 of their machines now - the dedicated Arc (arc 205) and the muti process tig205. Less than 400 for both together and they are amazing on both performance and quality. Have done everything from sheet metal to the frame on my daughter's car and they just keep chugging along. For the money, they are one of the best shop purchases I have made
Thank you Todd, especially for bringing on an expert. It was great to hear him speak as he was working. A real professional. Virgil...God bless you sir and thank you very much. EDIT: Side note. My father had a Lincoln stick welder that we used mainly 6013's for welding frames and such. I was taught to stick weld and did well enough for our purposes (Not pretty and my welds didn't break but they were not like a real pro). That was many (50 years ago) I'm happy to see that Lincoln still makes high quality welders despite the price.
Would be cool to test welding helmets as well. I used to use Miller helmets but recently picked up a Yeswelder helmet, and for the price, can't beat it. I'd say its arguably the best helmet I've owned.
I really like how you brought in an “expert” to help with the review. I would love to see more “guest experts” in their respective fields as long as they can stay unbiased and open minded like you do. Love the videos! Keep it up!
It seems like getting both a Yeswelder and an Azzuno for $612 might be a good strategy. Use the Azzuno for light gauge welding and the Yes for heavier stuff. Seems like the only downside would be breakage strength on heavy materials. I always check out your tests before I buy a new tool. No disappointments so far. Thanks!
If the welder is going to sit on a cart connected to the gas tank two welders would seem a pain. Would probably have a spool in each too. Have the Primeweld Tig225 which seems a good machine and am tempted by the reviews I’ve seen of their $550 mig
I went from the Harbor Freight cheepo welder to the YesWelder 205ds (also pretty darn cheap) I couldn't be happier with the Yeswelder. That being said, I bought the HF one years ago on sale for $89, and it always did what I needed, not elegant or clean welds but you can make 2 pieces one with it.
My favorite part was when your test proved the professional's assessment correct. That was an awesome way to add legitimacy to the content. Really appreciate all you put into this video and for always inluding Harbor Freight ! Haha, and yes, I am all about value, YesWelder for the win.
Personally I have a Miller 210 with gun on demand. Spent $2000 and that was 20 years ago. Has been a great welder and have never had any issues with it. Would like to see a comparison of Tig welders which will probably be my next purchase. Really looking at the Primeweld for a midrange priced unit that still performs good. Would really like to see your comparison of this type of welders.
@@ProjectFarm Here is what you will find out. On gasoline units, all of them are lying about their ratings and it sucks, but that is just the reality of where the market has gone in the last 20 years. Plus you can't buy a "commercial" pressure washer from a box store, those guys are really FOS about their ratings. On electric units, they can't really lie because if they try to push a 10HP electric motor over it's ratings, it will either trip the breaker or burn the motor up. They don't sell commercial duty electric units at box stores either though.
I've got a different YesWelder model, but I think the results are indicative. It does a great job on most things and costs well below similar machines. Nice to see another model from the same manufacturer I am used to and how similarly they perform.
I Purchased my (Yeswelder Stick ) after watching you test a few months ago and I'm very pleased with it. Love these videos where you test the welding machines!
Wow - if it were not for my appreciation about everything that Project Farm brings for tools and other things I'm sure I would not have watched this otherwise because I'm not in the welding realm. I have never welded in any form.. gasses or electric. I still really enjoyed learning a couple of things about welding, and very cool that there was a guest welder expert Virgil to help evaluate! Great, well thought-out testing, as always! What a channel! If I ever need anything welded I want Virgil to do the welding!
Thanks Virgil & Todd for the video. Excellent work. Not many UA-cam reviewers willing to spend this much of their own money for a truly unbiassed review.
I own the Lincoln, has been a great machine. Had a cheaper unit that just wasn’t consistent and when needing replacement parts was a pain. Great video as usual!
I love my YesWelder MIG. I have used it for over two years with great results. Bought it as a secondary welder when it was on sale for $299! I liked it so much it turned into primary. It did take a little practice changing settings to get best results for different thickness steel. I run 030 wire and 18/20 ga to 1/4" metal. It does run a bit hot using internal settings, but its easy to adjust for application and user. Hope that made sense, and helped anyone wanting more information. Another great comparison! Keep them coming 😊✌️
I'd love to see a comparison of portable solar power setups--the kind of thing that you could take camping or use at home when the power goes out. Thanks for all of your videos. Your testing is in a league of its own.
I really appreciate seeing an expert/professional in some videos. You do an excellent job devising and carrying out most tests, but nobody knows everything so it's great that you bring in someone with experience to review products that you might not be able to give a fair test.
My utmost admiration for this testing, I'm very grateful you're willing to invest so much in helping consumers. Very helpful to hear a welder's opinion. Have a great week!
VERY helpful tests! While this is one of those things it is very VERY hard to maintain consistency across tests, I feel like you made a really good effort at it, and I appreciate the difficulty and the attempt. In addition, the cost outlay for testing like this is quite significant - ESPECIALLY for a channel without sponsorships! Thanks for all you do, your videos are incredible! Personally, I use a Yeswelder, which does a good job for up to medium-duty use. No way I would have been able to get into the hobby of welding if I'd needed to spend $1000+ on a welder, so it opened up a whole world of projects for me that I otherwise wouldn't have been able to experience. Way to go, Todd, thanks again!
Welding is rather subjective, so having an experienced professional do their best with each tool is good enough for me! Perhaps Todd should have had a go as well to give an opinion on ease of getting a usable result.
@@peejay1981 Quality welding is not subjective. It's easy to see a good weld vs a bad weld. Having the welding done by a professional is the only way to do it because an amateur would be all over the place and likely not the get same weld quality from weld to weld, regardless of what he is using.
I have a 250 hitbox welder I got off Amazon during a lightening sale for about $200. I am very happy with it and it does good. I wouldn't recommend it for a professional who uses it every day but as a back up for them or a hobbyist type welder it is great. I use it restoring cars and can use it all day a times welding in body panels or even welding in a mustang ii front end conversion
I have a Vulcan 220. Had it for 3 years and it has been a great welder. I also have the spool gun for it. For comparison i also have a Miller 255 which is much more expensive. For short circuit and hobby welders i highly recommend the Vulcan. I can't run dual shield in it like my 255 but short circuit it's great. It can also stick and DC tig but i have only used the stick,mig and spool gun for aluminum.
I have a hobart mig welder that ive been using since 2007. Its only 110v but it does well on almost everything ive used it for. I also bought a yeswelder tig250 that i really like, I cant really compare it to anything as it is the only tig welder ive ever used.
Yet another unbiased and informative product review by PF. My take is that I would never ever purchase any product without first checking to see if Todd has done a review of said product. Thanks for what you do to inform us and for all of your hard work Todd! 👍👍👏👏
Phenomenal work! I don't envy the editing job on this one. There's just so much! I forwarded this to my Nephew who just got a great welding job out of welding school. I know he'll want his own welder at some point.
💸💸😳 Holy crap. Thank you for this, good sir. I hope you're able to make your money back, or put those machines to good use. Really appreciated Virgil's perspective as well. The 20-gauge test was a work of brilliance -- as someone who's only welded a couple times on 1/4" steel, I would never have guessed a welder could be "too hot" to that extreme.
Great suggestion! Which brands would you like tested? Biggest concern is the cost of buying everything for the review, but I'll figure out a way to do it if there's enough interest. Thanks again!
One of the things that sets the welders apart is the differences in duty cycles. You touched on it a little with the 5 minute test but it would have been interesting to see how long the welder needed to cool down before going again on a repeated cycle. I use a miller 250 (~$5k set up). I regularly will weld for upwards of around 30 minutes or so with minimal breaks for repositioning myself or the material. Ambient temperature makes a difference but I can usually weld for 2-3 minutes before the fan kicks on and that thing has never shut down on me.
Thank you for the sheet metal pen tests. As someone who works in automotive, too much penetration and heat is always a concern when working with custom exhaust and body work. Tack welding controls heat well, preventing warping, but it is nice to have the option to run a full bead without turning your body panel into a lays potato chip. I didn't see any destroyed welders in this video, and I heard tig welding mentioned. In case it isn't in your plans, I would be interested to see a tig and stick welding comparison as well. Great content as always.
I bought one of the generic Chinesium Mig/multi-process welders that eventually turned into a better known brand about 10 years ago for scratch-building a jet engine, and the quality difference between then and now is startling. I ended up replacing just about everything outside of the control board to make it run stainless consistently, but for the price I paid back then, it's mostly paid for itself that was destined to be a one-off project. Got lucky (?) on that front as they're all about the same welder with a different case these days, but the price gap between them and the top shelf models doesn't make sense if you're a weekend builder. Commercial stuff, sure, I'd spend the extra coin if/when you have the budget and the use case.
I really appreciate enormously what you are doing for us, whom do not have the money to test all these different types of brands. Words cannot express how much I appreciate and am grateful for your time and efforts making these videos!!!
I have been looking for a low cost TIG welder but possibly combination welder. This was an amazing video and was exactly what I was looking for if I decide to get another welder. Keep up the awesome work!
I got the Chicago electric mig 180 5 years or so ago, so it's nice to know how it compares. It's not the easiest to work with, but nice to know what other options there are and how capable when choosing my next one. I also have a hard time on thinner material, so nice to know it wasn't just me.
I have the same welder and just use it to booger things that aren't too critical. I do wonder how it would weld with the cap mod easily found on the internet.....
Great video. If you're welding for a living blue or red are typically the go to brands but for most you just need something that can handle a range and you covered that range in these tests. Excellent videos as always.
It would be great to have a comparison of 'chemical resistant' hand spray bottles. Ones I've tried advertise realizable and harsh chemical resistant mechanism, but things like brake cleaner or acetone can jam or cause leaks.
I am actually on the lookout for a welder. My budget is around $500. The YesWelder more than suits my needs. And in the meantime, I save almost a 3rd of my budget. Thank you very much Project Farm ! Simply amazing !
@looking_33, @mediocreman2 Thanks for the suggestions. Unfortunately, out of the welders presented in the video, that are any good and fit my needs and budget, the YesWelder is the only one being sold in my country. The welders that you suggested, go above my budget, quite significantly with shipping and taxes included. And on the other hand, there is the warranty issue. It would be quite a hassle to send it abroad if it got broken.
I've never welded anything, I'm just here for the Todd factor lol. I learn so much from the videos and I love the way you go about the testing man. Keep up the great work!
Here’s the list of products reviewed. More details in the video description. Thank you!
Latest Model Lincoln: amzn.to/46pDbuY
Yeswelder: amzn.to/44gFGPR
Azzuno: amzn.to/44cmWRv
Warcking: amzn.to/46ADN1R
Flameweld: amzn.to/44A6OJv
Vulcan: Available at Harbor Freight
Chicago Electric: Available at Harbor Freight
He let the welder use his pen!!! 😂
Good God the amount you spent to test this is terrifying. Thank you for reliable and trustworthy work.
I'm sure he keeps the receipts and returns them after he's done filming.
@@JoeR203 Doubt it, most probably wouldn't accept the returns, and he can always write these off as a business expense.
Thank you! 7 welders reviewed in a 15 minute video is a very challenging task. It'd be much easier to make a 1 hour video on all of the welders. Thanks again!
Nearly 3 million subs and UA-cam friendly, family friendly content. I'm guessing that he's doing okay.
@@ProjectFarmI would HAPPILY watch a 1 hour video
"I just went out and bought 7 different mig welders" Is the greatest opening line to a video of all time. The testing this man does is just absurdly good. Unbiased, fair and honest. That's why this channel is easily one of the best on UA-cam. Well done sir!!!
Thank you!
@@ProjectFarmno thank you. Us and our wallets would like to know. And your giving us this knowledge.
It's a great day when project farm and welders are together.A plasma cutter review would be great too. I got burned on buying a cheap plasma once and would love to see how the other ones stack up.
Best tool review channel. Very impressive!
*Five Stars! Cheap AC Tig welders next please! Everyone wants to weld aluminum!*
This guy is a national treasure. We are at a point where we just check his channel first for the review of what we're going to buy.
100%. Always always check this channel in the parking lot before I go in the store 😂
Thanks!
@@ProjectFarm Todd, you are in first place...and then comes nothing for a long way.
legit
I'm just as guilty! I trust Todd's reviews 100%.
NO.1 independent Product testing channel on UA-cam by far. These awesome product reviews are so in-depth you can take the knowledge and purchase these products with some of the uncertainty taken care of. I personally have bought different products after watching some of these reviews.
Thanks!
I dont think anyone can deny the quality of Lincoln welders. But for the price, I love my Yeswelder. They are a company that was founded via kickstarter and have ALWAYS listened to their customers (via facebook groups, online reviews, etc). Thank you Todd for the testing!!!
You are welcome! Thanks for sharing.
Their spare parts availability and serviceability . . .?
It's funny to me considering the issues I've had with Lincoln products. Especially the helmets.
I mean, I've always been team Miller when OTHER people buy them, I feel like they're nicer machines, but that's like saying you like Mercedes more than BMW when you drive an old Honda.
I only have a tiny stick machine I got off Amazon.
Can deny the quality of lincoln welders when your workplace has standardized on them and you have to use them every day. My home miller, at less than half the price ($4k), comfortably runs circles around them. Inconsistent wire drive speed, nonsensical errors (such as "power supply not connected), and badly designed plastic parts.
By far my favorite part of your videos is the fact that you don't outright tell people which product to buy, and you just lay out the bare performance for people to make their own decisions from. Thanks for your efforts, Todd!
My pleasure!
Yes, an excellent trait.
Exactly. And doing what people recommend to do.
Yup. I really appreciate that there’s no agenda like “this is why you need to be spending $2000 on a Mig welder”
Yep PF realizes that what might perform the best might not fit the needs of the consumer the best. Just as a $200 welder might not have the best customer service/build quality for commercial use, a $2000 welder might not be used to its full potential in a consumers shop.
Thanks for another stellar review, Todd! As a welder with 25+ years of experience, I will say that what you get out of buying Miller or Lincoln machines is great customer support. Pick up the phone and a tech can walk you through a repair, or you take take it to a local dealer for service. Not so with the Chinese stuff. Had a problem with the control board on an Everlast PowerMTS 251 welder at my last job, and getting in touch with anyone was a joke. They emailed me a PDF that looked like it was drawn up by a 5 year old, and when I had a question about clarifying some of the ridiculous crap on their drawing I couldn't get anyone to call me back. I ended up leaving that position before we ever got a resolution on it.
With welders, buy them cheap enough that when they break you just throw it away, or save up your money for something blue or red and keep it forever, fixing it along the way. There really isn't any middle ground unless you want to be constantly frustrated. My two pennies, anyway.
Funny, lately I've seen some of the Red and Blue customer and warranty work being very poor. Wrong parts installed... No offering support. It was the reason i ended up going a different route.
Well, you are paying for the tech support at $2250 vs $360. How many YesWelders can you buy for $360 for the price of one Lincoln? And its not like the worker in the US is getting any decent medical benefits like in Europe, either. We are paying workers here nothing but overcharging customers. What use is the tech help if the parts are another ripoff, eh? I'll get the Chinese one.
Great point. I've also had good luck with Hobart which is part of Miller. A lower grade but still made in the USA and affordable.
Yeah I retires from my production welding job with only 16 yrs experience. We used these huge millers. During all that time I managed to learn almost nothing!
@@mjremy2605 If you're just gluing stuff together, I can see your point, but I can also see from the video and my own experience in the machine shop I work at that those cheapo Chinese off-brand welders aren't going to pass any kind of certification.
I’m a 23 year old that doesn’t know much about anything. Your videos have taught me SO MUCH. It may not feel like it sometimes but you’re helping people every time you post. Thank you.
Keep learning man. Don't just watch videos but get hands on with stuff and do the work. It's the best way to learn even if you mess up. You will learn from mistakes.
nice tornado avatar
nice tornado avatar
Take a course
I love the recent adjustment in your videos to frequently include expert opinions. Of course we trust your thoughts and experiments Todd - but bringing in experts like Virgil is the next level!
Thanks!
@@ProjectFarmdo you have a long list of video ideas? How about scour the internet forums a bit for the best homemade peentrating oil. I.e. Atf + acetone mix, brake fluid, etc. That could even be just a short form video.
Yes, fantastic idea you have done to move to the next level!
Just like the windshield repair test I like how you brought in an expert.
Thank you! The experts add a lot of cost to the reviews, but it's well worth it! Virgil did an amazing job!!
Over 2k $ for a welder!? Gotta appreciate the dedication and the quality Project Farm provides.
Thank you very much!
@@ProjectFarm If you haven't, TIG welders "next". I need one for my artsy fartzy stuff.
that's because it's your business. He laid out all this cash just to test them. @@Its_Captain_Jack_Sparrow
Andrew has never played with a fronius I see.
@@Its_Captain_Jack_Sparrow it's really wild how much technology has come huh. We've got a 90's Miller that set us back a TON. Now they can fit that into a $500 machine
Honestly, as a welder I can take any of these welders and put them through their paces. You have your hobby welders then your industry welders. Respect for your honest review. It all depends what you need to weld.
Thanks!
Those aren't all hobby welders just because of their price. That Vulcan Welder is superior to all the welders from Miller and Lincoln that cost 5 times the price. More durable, more features, easier to get a better quality of weld, and better duty cycle. Miller and Lincoln are resting on their laurels from long ago. Just like shitty ass snap off tools.
live in Canada an worked production welding on the line for years an i have a cheap canadian tire flux core mig an for around the house it's all i need for 200 bucks on sale , dunno what the duty cycle is but it's yet to shut down so figure 100% an welds aluminum to so what do you want you going into business or welding an exhaust up with the odd body work , imo
I watched a video by deboss garage they tested a 75 dollar welder and it worked awesome
@@openroadtrucking6562 I weld every now and then. Actually use a Vulcan tig welder. Works pretty dam good. The one I have it the one Lincon was taking Vulcan to court over. Have met a few welder who prefer Vulcans over Lincons and Millers. Have also met welders who are vary biased towards specific brands.
I've run out of ways to say, the most comprehensive and best testing on YT, Thanks Todd. 👍🇺🇸
I greatly appreciate it!!!
Hardly comprehensive. No Millermatic, let alone any Miller brand welder was included in this test. That's a huge oversight that renders this whole thing pointless, IMHO.
How did he know I needed a new welder???
@@therealmitch-a-palooza7262🤦
@@therealmitch-a-palooza7262he put the Lincoln in for that price range of welder. That would have cost another 2000$ for this video
Wonderful reviews as always. I love that Todd brings his knowledge of thoroughly testing products to welders, while also admitting that he's not skilled enough to test himself, so he gets a professional to do the welding and evaluate the results.
Thank you!
I feel like you read our minds when you do all these tests; as always, I really appreciate the information contained in your reviews.
Thank you very much!
If you mentioned it I missed it, but replacement parts and consumables are also important to consider when shopping for a welder. A better welder can be repaired instead of being disposable if something happens, meaning a better welder can be cheaper in the long run and nicer to use.
Yes!
The repair part is partially true, but the problem with the new inverter machines is, if a board goes out and it’s not under warranty then you may as well buy a new machine. So you can spend say $2500 on a newer Lincoln machine and fry it, or you could spend $1000 on a Hobart/vulcan/insert other “cheap” brand and fry it. Key is getting a machine that has a good warranty and take care of it. This is my view as someone who sells the red and blue machines for a living
@@TyStone80 Or buy something like the yeswelder at $400 with its one year warranty that performs damn near as good as the lincoln at $2500+ and in a year weather it frys or not buy another, point is you can buy 6 of the yeswelders which carrys you one year past the lincoln's 5 year warranty and you will not be stuck with old technology when the newest comes out or take a major kick in the pants when you try to sell your 5 year old lincoln because you want to upgrade to that newest technology, also the new lincolns and millers are not anywhere the quality they used to be as far as durable, that went away in welders when they went away from transformer to IGBT inverter design,,, nicer and easier to weld with yes but more prone to taking a crap hell yes but that's the trade off, for the average joe occasional home hobbiest weeked warrior welder a 2000$+ welder make abosolutely no sense whatsoever not with some of the high performing low priced options out there, you want a welder that will kick damn near any welder by miller or lincoln or esab right square in the A**,,, even the more comercial line offerings by those,,, check out the primeweld mig 285 it is a top performing built like a tank machine for under $1100, miller lincoln and esab are for guys that just like to piss away money to get an ego stroking and an A** reaming.
Keep up the great work! Not only are you unbiased and willing to test, but you're humble enough to bring in a specialist when testing products outside of your expertise and ability. Thank you for continuing to be among the great testing channels!
My friend has owned the Vulcan welder for about 5 years. That thing is a beast. It was even flooded at one point and was let to dry well, and its still going strong. The automatic function is cool too, you put the type of wire and wire size and set the dial for metal type. It does a pretty good job at autosetting.
Overall great video, cool to see how some welders are bad and sometimes its not the person welding badly.
Thanks! Thanks for feedback.
I asked for this video a little while back, and you completely delivered.
From the bottom of my heart, thank you. I never knew what those smaller welders would deliver, and you definitely put a nail in that coffin.
Once again, awesome video. 🙏
Thank you. 💕❤️🙏
You're so welcome!
I love these comparison videos! I would love to see a "is new really better?" type of series where you compared brand new units from retail vs used units from the popular used sites like FB marketplace and ebay.
Thanks for the suggestion.
Whenever realistic I choose pre owned but it's luck of the draw for how much life is left in it.
If it was better by design it's still likely to be better than single use junk.
Neat idea. I imagine there’s so many variables with used products- if it’s been modified and how well it’s been maintained/treated, if it’s been abused, how much usage it has…
This is why it's important to support one's like this that pays all out of pocket for these expensive tests the average Joe could never afford! Love the work, my dude!
Love your hard work and enthusiasm in all your work!
Thanks!
Thank you for doing this video. Nobody has done this type of in-depth review of welders. The amount of time, editing, and cost to do this must have been insane. It definitely helped me make a decision.
Thank you for sharing!
I am not a welder Todd, but your tests taught me a great deal more than I knew about welding!! Thanks, Virgil, for the expert opinions.
Your welcome
Try "You're"@@virgilmayfield7566. I know, blame it on spell check.
I looked seriously at the Vulcan several years ago. At that time it was a DC welder only and not capable for AC to run aluminum. By the time I priced two Vulcans(DC unit and AC unit with MIG and TIG) with the necessary accessories to get what was needed they were within just a few hundred dollars of the Miller Multi-process 220 with everything included. Ultimately I bought the Miller. Every time I run the Miller the grin under my helmet is huge. It does everything I need and does it well == at a higher price point than any of the ones you tested. I have always subscribed to the "Cringe once - Grin many" method of buying tools. Having been a licensed and degreed aircraft mechanic for many years, as well as licensed in motorcycles and many versions of small engine equipment, this mind set has served me well if not not inexpensively.
Having an expert welder to consistently run the units and give commentary was extremely helpful.
Thanks for the feedback.
As a gear head that rents shop space with a buddy, we’ve had a Vulcan 220 for like 5 or 6 years now, such a good value machine. It’s been going on flawlessly for the amount of use we do with it, for home garage work, it’s perfect
Thanks for sharing.
I was thinking about picking one up someday. I have the Titanium Easy Flux 125 welder and that little thing surprises me. It performs well once you put some decent flux core in it. Great for small around the house things and small projects.
Would love to see how each of the multi-process welders do with TIG and stick also!
Great suggestion! Thank you
I have the 220, it's nice, but the biggest annoyance is they didn't run the gas solenoid that the mig uses in tig mode, So it's pedal start but the gas has to be manually turned on and off. Like it's not bad considering the machine at all, but like it couldn't of been that hard to make the gas solenoid for both mig and tig.
I second this. Since they sell them as a feature, and increase the price as a result, it’d be good to see which ones really work.
Doing automotive, I need to do Aluminum & Stainless at times.
Yes! I'd love to see the multi functions as well. I'll be purchasing a welder soon to learn on, having welding options is something I don't know if I need or don't need for my intended type of uses.
I have the yes welder it’s a great tig as well
That wasp dying by a fiery pool of death was such a nice touch 🤌🏼
LMAOO I noticed it too ☠️☠️
10:48 That wasp had the same reaction I did when I did my first pass with the Vulcan welder! 🐝 👨🏭
A logical response from the insect. 🖖
One of the best channels on here! Thanks!
Thanks! Thanks for supporting the channel! I really appreciate it!
Great video! I've been running a Lincoln weld pac 140 HD 110v for 6 years. Not only has it paid for itself but I've done jobs that should have been done with a bigger 220 welder and you cannot beat the portability with flux core wire and ease of use. Keep up the great work!
Amen brother. Mine is about 30 years old.
Thanks for sharing! Thanks, will do!
Great work as always! I appreciate that you try both the cheap and expensive and compare them both head-to-head as well as taking into account their price. I don't expect a $300 welder to work as well as a $2300 welder, but if it can do a decent job for the occasional welds, then it's great for hobbyists like me.
The truth with welders is for diy and hobby the cheapest is as much of not more than you need as for the expensive ones you need to be an expert to make use of the added features because that who there for
I didn't. It worked well enough and better than most. Can't bet a Lincoln.
Thanks! Thanks for the feedback.
@@sirreus3003 The Esab Rebel's are pretty good too. I've been a journeyman for close to 15 years now, used team red, and team blue. Have team yellow in my garage because they are close enough to miller or lincoln for my home use. I don't get all the features but enough of them and at a lower price. I also don't feel like I am welding with a piece of garbage either, that I am working around vs. just working with.
I am a welder and have been for a decade now. Favorite test so far. I personally have a Lincoln electric 200 Tig welder and it really is a fantastic little machine ESPECIALLY for a 110 capable unit. Expensive stuff for a beginner but a good addition to a mechanic shop.
Thanks! Thanks for sharing.
You are a Weldor ! You operate a welder ! Er is the machine . Or is the operator . Its not operater , its operator . Or is the operator ! Rock on !
@@theweldor757 ok you got me on a technicality lol I’m a welder operator. You are the second person in my entire life to correct me on that
I can make stacked dimes welds with it on stainless steel?
@@aaronneher4860 im 60 brother 😳. In the 80s before the all mighty computer . If you went to the library like we had to do . The literature clearly stated we are Weldors . Its just one a them things that didnt get passed on to the internet 😒😒😒😒
Its the first thing i teach new helpers ! Be safe brother !
Nothing beats my grandpa's very old and very sketchy welder. Against all odds, 13 major hurricanes, and being thrown around by a tornado, it still works. Now that his workshop is being cleared out due to old age, i got to claim his immortal deathtrap and give it a loving home
I’d bet it’s an old Lincoln 220 AC “Tombstone” welder. Indestructible!
They dont make shit like they used to thats for sure
@@connivingkhajiit I restore old Emerson brand fans from around 1920-1935. They can weigh upwards of 35+ pounds and are packed full of thick chunks of metal. Nothing was made to cut cost. Everything was made to last, and when finally worn, it was easily replaced. I have a 102 year old brass six bladed fan that funs like new sitting next to me now. It's been used by others for 85 years and me for 15 more. I have went through several Walmart generic fans out in the garage, they last two or three years. Most Emerson examples today need work, but most can be restored to fantastic running condition. There are actually lots of people like me and most have even more antique fans. I alone have over a dozen fans about 100 years old that run great. There are SO many antique fans that are in such good mechanical shape.
That is A LOT of rambling for "they don't make them like that" comments. I just wanted to give a detailed example where I know it is 100% absolutely true. Don't even get me started with 100 year old axes. The short of it is any axe from 50 years ago is better than any axe today. :(***
Ok, to end this essay. That fan next to me that will probably run another 100 years. Well, it cost $37 back when it was new. Adjusted for inflation it's over $650!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Imagine going to checkout at Target with your new fan, some milk and deodorant and the total is $700. ;) Inflation and many other things basically make it impossible to manufacture this way. We are in the age of value priced shit and must struggle to find anything of decent quality.
A welder purchase is in my very close future, mainly to teach myself how to weld on small home owner type projects. I'll be referencing your videos heavily when making my purchase. THANK YOU for your consistent HONEST reviews. Truly a gem of you tube. The best if there ever was one.
Thanks so much!
Incredible , I just spent a day and a half comparing wire-feed welders on Amazon. I had actually pretty much decided that my needs the Azzuno would be right for me. This just confirmed it.
And a huge Thank You to Virgil for his professional assistance in making this video. Well done guys.
Thanks!
When I buy something like this I know I can't afford the best one But don't want to buy pure shite that doesn't do what it says on the tin 😊
Todd's opinion is where I start if he has a video on what I'm looking for 🤗👍🇮🇪
@@ProjectFarmMake sure you use the affiliate link in the description when you buy, helps Todd pay for this stuff.
Excellent video. As a welder I appreciate your diligence and careful testing.
Thank you!
Project Farm: we're gonna test that
Manufacturers: **visible discomfort**
Really impressive how good those value options are, but the consistency you get from the Vulcan and Lincoln Electric (not to mention the RANGE from the Lincoln) really demonstrate what you're getting for the price. Love the video, keep up the great work!
Thanks, will do!
I discovered yeswelder about 3 years ago and have 2 of their machines now - the dedicated Arc (arc 205) and the muti process tig205. Less than 400 for both together and they are amazing on both performance and quality. Have done everything from sheet metal to the frame on my daughter's car and they just keep chugging along. For the money, they are one of the best shop purchases I have made
Thanks for the feedback.
Thank you Todd, especially for bringing on an expert. It was great to hear him speak as he was working. A real professional. Virgil...God bless you sir and thank you very much. EDIT: Side note. My father had a Lincoln stick welder that we used mainly 6013's for welding frames and such. I was taught to stick weld and did well enough for our purposes (Not pretty and my welds didn't break but they were not like a real pro). That was many (50 years ago) I'm happy to see that Lincoln still makes high quality welders despite the price.
Glad you enjoyed it
Thanks!
Thanks for supporting the channel! I really appreciate it!
Would be cool to test welding helmets as well. I used to use Miller helmets but recently picked up a Yeswelder helmet, and for the price, can't beat it. I'd say its arguably the best helmet I've owned.
Thanks for the suggestion.
@@ProjectFarmI chose an ESAB helmet, a model just above the very basic one, and with four sensors, it really has a top performance/price ratio!
Virgil great job and thank you for your insight. Todd that wasp after the second Vulcan test made me laugh. Great video as always.
Thanks! Thanks for sharing!
Thanks Todd for another awesome review. Thanks Virgil for your professional skills and support.
You are welcome!
I really like how you brought in an “expert” to help with the review. I would love to see more “guest experts” in their respective fields as long as they can stay unbiased and open minded like you do. Love the videos! Keep it up!
Thanks, will do!
It seems like getting both a Yeswelder and an Azzuno for $612 might be a good strategy. Use the Azzuno for light gauge welding and the Yes for heavier stuff. Seems like the only downside would be breakage strength on heavy materials. I always check out your tests before I buy a new tool. No disappointments so far. Thanks!
The Yeswelder will run fine on thin gauge if you use the solid wire and shield gas. Flux core wire is better suited for thicker material.
Buy a Lincoln 140 for $800 and you only need 1. Using mine for about 30 years.
You are welcome!
If the welder is going to sit on a cart connected to the gas tank two welders would seem a pain. Would probably have a spool in each too.
Have the Primeweld Tig225 which seems a good machine and am tempted by the reviews I’ve seen of their $550 mig
Todd, this was a phenomenal vid. Adding Virgil was a great move, I know it adds to the cost but thank you for the no nonsense reviews.
Thanks and you are welcome!
Wow, you spent a small fortune in order to make this video! As always, your testing videos are top notch and MUCH appreciated. Thank you!
You are welcome!
I went from the Harbor Freight cheepo welder to the YesWelder 205ds (also pretty darn cheap) I couldn't be happier with the Yeswelder. That being said, I bought the HF one years ago on sale for $89, and it always did what I needed, not elegant or clean welds but you can make 2 pieces one with it.
Thanks for sharing.
My favorite part was when your test proved the professional's assessment correct. That was an awesome way to add legitimacy to the content. Really appreciate all you put into this video and for always inluding Harbor Freight !
Haha, and yes, I am all about value, YesWelder for the win.
Thank you!
Personally I have a Miller 210 with gun on demand. Spent $2000 and that was 20 years ago. Has been a great welder and have never had any issues with it. Would like to see a comparison of Tig welders which will probably be my next purchase. Really looking at the Primeweld for a midrange priced unit that still performs good. Would really like to see your comparison of this type of welders.
Thanks for the suggestion.
AHP Alpha TIG is probably the best for your money.
I would love to see a comparison on commercial pressure washers. As always, great video!!!
Thanks! Thanks for the suggestion.
@@ProjectFarm Here is what you will find out. On gasoline units, all of them are lying about their ratings and it sucks, but that is just the reality of where the market has gone in the last 20 years. Plus you can't buy a "commercial" pressure washer from a box store, those guys are really FOS about their ratings. On electric units, they can't really lie because if they try to push a 10HP electric motor over it's ratings, it will either trip the breaker or burn the motor up. They don't sell commercial duty electric units at box stores either though.
I really love when you get subject matter experts to provide additional feedback. Awesome review!
Thanks!
I've got a different YesWelder model, but I think the results are indicative. It does a great job on most things and costs well below similar machines. Nice to see another model from the same manufacturer I am used to and how similarly they perform.
Thanks or the feedback.
I Purchased my (Yeswelder Stick ) after watching you test a few months ago and I'm very pleased with it. Love these videos where you test the welding machines!
Thanks!
I appreciate bringing in an expert welder to get their take. Great video!
Thanks and you are welcome!
Wow - if it were not for my appreciation about everything that Project Farm brings for tools and other things I'm sure I would not have watched this otherwise because I'm not in the welding realm.
I have never welded in any form.. gasses or electric. I still really enjoyed learning a couple of things about welding, and very cool that there was a guest welder expert Virgil to help evaluate! Great, well thought-out testing, as always! What a channel!
If I ever need anything welded I want Virgil to do the welding!
thank you for the video, we reached MiG welders?! you really are stepping up your game.
Thank you very much!
Thanks Virgil & Todd for the video. Excellent work. Not many UA-cam reviewers willing to spend this much of their own money for a truly unbiassed review.
Thanks and you are welcome!
I own the Lincoln, has been a great machine. Had a cheaper unit that just wasn’t consistent and when needing replacement parts was a pain. Great video as usual!
Thanks! Thanks for the feedback.
That's right. Don't skimp on the quality!
this video is the reason i ordered the yeswelder. am happy with it so far. thank you for the time you invest in testing!
You are welcome!
The amount of information provided by this channel is unbelievable.
Thank you very much for your work doing all these tests. ❤
No problem!
I love my YesWelder MIG. I have used it for over two years with great results. Bought it as a secondary welder when it was on sale for $299! I liked it so much it turned into primary. It did take a little practice changing settings to get best results for different thickness steel. I run 030 wire and 18/20 ga to 1/4" metal. It does run a bit hot using internal settings, but its easy to adjust for application and user. Hope that made sense, and helped anyone wanting more information. Another great comparison! Keep them coming 😊✌️
Quality content as usual, thanks PF!
Thank you very much!
I'd love to see a comparison of portable solar power setups--the kind of thing that you could take camping or use at home when the power goes out. Thanks for all of your videos. Your testing is in a league of its own.
Thanks and you are welcome! Thanks for the suggestion.
@@ProjectFarmGreat idea Ill second this one.
I’ll third.
I really appreciate seeing an expert/professional in some videos. You do an excellent job devising and carrying out most tests, but nobody knows everything so it's great that you bring in someone with experience to review products that you might not be able to give a fair test.
Thanks!
I love your videos. Thanks for being honest, through, and concise.
Thanks and you are welcome!
My utmost admiration for this testing, I'm very grateful you're willing to invest so much in helping consumers. Very helpful to hear a welder's opinion. Have a great week!
Thanks!
This is exactly the video I was looking for. I've always wanted to learn to weld.
Glad I could help!
Thanks! That's exactly what I was in the market for. Now I just have to learn how to weld 😉
Awesome! I'll put together a "how to" on welding if there's enough interest. Just let me know.
Me too!
I would love a step by step on how to use a welder, much of this is Greek to me. @@ProjectFarm
VERY helpful tests! While this is one of those things it is very VERY hard to maintain consistency across tests, I feel like you made a really good effort at it, and I appreciate the difficulty and the attempt. In addition, the cost outlay for testing like this is quite significant - ESPECIALLY for a channel without sponsorships! Thanks for all you do, your videos are incredible! Personally, I use a Yeswelder, which does a good job for up to medium-duty use. No way I would have been able to get into the hobby of welding if I'd needed to spend $1000+ on a welder, so it opened up a whole world of projects for me that I otherwise wouldn't have been able to experience. Way to go, Todd, thanks again!
Welding is rather subjective, so having an experienced professional do their best with each tool is good enough for me! Perhaps Todd should have had a go as well to give an opinion on ease of getting a usable result.
@@peejay1981 Quality welding is not subjective. It's easy to see a good weld vs a bad weld. Having the welding done by a professional is the only way to do it because an amateur would be all over the place and likely not the get same weld quality from weld to weld, regardless of what he is using.
I have a 250 hitbox welder I got off Amazon during a lightening sale for about $200. I am very happy with it and it does good. I wouldn't recommend it for a professional who uses it every day but as a back up for them or a hobbyist type welder it is great. I use it restoring cars and can use it all day a times welding in body panels or even welding in a mustang ii front end conversion
Thanks for sharing.
I have a Vulcan 220. Had it for 3 years and it has been a great welder. I also have the spool gun for it. For comparison i also have a Miller 255 which is much more expensive. For short circuit and hobby welders i highly recommend the Vulcan. I can't run dual shield in it like my 255 but short circuit it's great. It can also stick and DC tig but i have only used the stick,mig and spool gun for aluminum.
Thanks for sharing.
Thank you Todd always appreciate your great content
Very welcome
Would have love to see a follow up with more mid grade machines like Hobart. Really liked Virgil’s input and review!
Thanks! Thanks for the suggestion.
I have a hobart mig welder that ive been using since 2007. Its only 110v but it does well on almost everything ive used it for.
I also bought a yeswelder tig250 that i really like, I cant really compare it to anything as it is the only tig welder ive ever used.
Wow - thank you for putting in all this work and cost for our benefit!
You are welcome!
Yet another unbiased and informative product review by PF. My take is that I would never ever purchase any product without first checking to see if Todd has done a review of said product. Thanks for what you do to inform us and for all of your hard work Todd! 👍👍👏👏
Thanks and you are welcome!
Phenomenal work! I don't envy the editing job on this one. There's just so much! I forwarded this to my Nephew who just got a great welding job out of welding school. I know he'll want his own welder at some point.
The fact he can fit this much info into 15 minutes is amazing.
Thanks so much! Thanks for sharing.
💸💸😳 Holy crap. Thank you for this, good sir. I hope you're able to make your money back, or put those machines to good use. Really appreciated Virgil's perspective as well. The 20-gauge test was a work of brilliance -- as someone who's only welded a couple times on 1/4" steel, I would never have guessed a welder could be "too hot" to that extreme.
You are welcome!
Thanks for your effort in designing these tests. Also, I enjoyed seeing you participating in the Offroad Games. I hope you had a great time!
You are welcome! I had a great time!
Todd, could you do a comparison of budget plasma cutters? I think many would be interested in this.
Great suggestion! Which brands would you like tested? Biggest concern is the cost of buying everything for the review, but I'll figure out a way to do it if there's enough interest. Thanks again!
I would like to see some that are dual input voltage, without onboard air, and aimed at consumer uses. Tooliom is one, Amico and maybe yeswelder.
A future video you could do would be to test refrigerated airline dryers, as these are most useful for plasma cutting, as well as spray painting.
Seconded!
One of the things that sets the welders apart is the differences in duty cycles. You touched on it a little with the 5 minute test but it would have been interesting to see how long the welder needed to cool down before going again on a repeated cycle. I use a miller 250 (~$5k set up). I regularly will weld for upwards of around 30 minutes or so with minimal breaks for repositioning myself or the material. Ambient temperature makes a difference but I can usually weld for 2-3 minutes before the fan kicks on and that thing has never shut down on me.
Thanks for the feedback.
Thank you for the sheet metal pen tests. As someone who works in automotive, too much penetration and heat is always a concern when working with custom exhaust and body work. Tack welding controls heat well, preventing warping, but it is nice to have the option to run a full bead without turning your body panel into a lays potato chip.
I didn't see any destroyed welders in this video, and I heard tig welding mentioned. In case it isn't in your plans, I would be interested to see a tig and stick welding comparison as well.
Great content as always.
Thanks! Thanks for the suggestion.
100% best Chanel on UA-cam. Thank you for your dedication my friend
Thanks and you are welcome!
I bought one of the generic Chinesium Mig/multi-process welders that eventually turned into a better known brand about 10 years ago for scratch-building a jet engine, and the quality difference between then and now is startling. I ended up replacing just about everything outside of the control board to make it run stainless consistently, but for the price I paid back then, it's mostly paid for itself that was destined to be a one-off project. Got lucky (?) on that front as they're all about the same welder with a different case these days, but the price gap between them and the top shelf models doesn't make sense if you're a weekend builder. Commercial stuff, sure, I'd spend the extra coin if/when you have the budget and the use case.
Thanks for not telling us which brand thereby making your comment useless.
This was an amazing comparison thank you. Id love to see you compare TIG welders!
Thanks! Thanks for the suggestion.
A video on LED light bulbs be cool. Rate their light output, color temp and power use and reliability.
Great idea, used so many, some worked others not, on my 2 vehicles and motorcycle...
Thank you for the video idea!
@@ProjectFarm
If you do go this route: Waveform Lighting is pretty great.
I really appreciate enormously what you are doing for us, whom do not have the money to test all these different types of brands. Words cannot express how much I appreciate and am grateful for your time and efforts making these videos!!!
Thanks so much!
Your welcome so much!!! I also thank you for the others whom appreciate it too!
I have been looking for a low cost TIG welder but possibly combination welder. This was an amazing video and was exactly what I was looking for if I decide to get another welder. Keep up the awesome work!
Thanks, will do!
I got the Chicago electric mig 180 5 years or so ago, so it's nice to know how it compares. It's not the easiest to work with, but nice to know what other options there are and how capable when choosing my next one. I also have a hard time on thinner material, so nice to know it wasn't just me.
Thanks for sharing!
I have the same welder and just use it to booger things that aren't too critical. I do wonder how it would weld with the cap mod easily found on the internet.....
You’re awesome! Thank you for continuing to make amazing videos without selling out to sponsors. Great unbiased reporting!
Thanks and you are welcome!
This is an impressive demonstration. Thank you for putting this knowledge out in the world without being biased towards any company. Great work!
Thanks and you are welcome!
Great video. If you're welding for a living blue or red are typically the go to brands but for most you just need something that can handle a range and you covered that range in these tests. Excellent videos as always.
Thanks!
The flux core test is great because thats what most home consumers will use.
Because it's gasless?
Great point! Thank you
@@MadLadsAnonymous yep. Most hobbyists won't want to buy a massive gas cylinder
@@Kumquat_Lord You can buy 1 cubic foot cylinders at nearly every welding supply store and many farm stores
Amazing review as always. Blows my mind how much effort you put into these and wow, is it worth it. Thanks guys!
Thanks!
It would be great to have a comparison of 'chemical resistant' hand spray bottles. Ones I've tried advertise realizable and harsh chemical resistant mechanism, but things like brake cleaner or acetone can jam or cause leaks.
I am actually on the lookout for a welder. My budget is around $500. The YesWelder more than suits my needs. And in the meantime, I save almost a 3rd of my budget. Thank you very much Project Farm ! Simply amazing !
you'll regret it just buy one from the big 3 I learned the hard way... miller, lincoln, esab
You are welcome!
Not sure if I'd waste time with that. Go for the Hobart 140. Just a bit more money
@looking_33, @mediocreman2 Thanks for the suggestions. Unfortunately, out of the welders presented in the video, that are any good and fit my needs and budget, the YesWelder is the only one being sold in my country. The welders that you suggested, go above my budget, quite significantly with shipping and taxes included. And on the other hand, there is the warranty issue. It would be quite a hassle to send it abroad if it got broken.
I've never welded anything, I'm just here for the Todd factor lol. I learn so much from the videos and I love the way you go about the testing man. Keep up the great work!
Thanks, will do!
You just don't stop surprising. Thank for all the amazing work you do.
You are welcome!
Amazing as always. Looks like you’re starting your own welding business
Thank you very much! I don't have the skills to weld for others. lol
@@ProjectFarm you can always learn
He's too busy testing other things, at least I hope! 😂