Good afternoon,
I am starting a small welding business and will be doing some mobile repairs. I do mostly TIG in my shop, but when working on gates or heavy metal, I will be stick welding. I use a Lincoln Squarewave 200. My question is should I invest in a small engine driven welder, OR buy a 7500 watt generator and run my Squarewave off that? Lincoln says 7500 watt is fine for that machine.
If I buy a champion generator its only $750, vs 2k for an engine drivin welder.
Any thoughts?
-Anthony
General welding questions that dont fit in TIG, MIG, Stick, or Certification etc.
Artie F. Emm
- Artie F. Emm
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My understanding is inverter welders require a generator with a "clean" power source rating of less than 5% Total Harmonic Distortion. I looked into the Champion generator at one time and had to call them to find out the THD is 26%. So it might be worth checking into what THD the Lincoln requires, and what generator can supply it.
But i agree, a generator sounds like the right way to go.
But i agree, a generator sounds like the right way to go.
Dave
aka "RTFM"
aka "RTFM"
noddybrian
- noddybrian
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I recently needed to go the generator route as I have to weld some gates / fencing at a location without power & the only access means carrying all equipment across about 1/2 mile of beach so an engine drive is out ! did some testing as to what size I could get away with - found that inverters mostly use in proportion to the load & manufacturers tend to recommend 1.5 * the maximum load ( which is a sensible ) so I can use smaller than originally thought as I'm only using small rods as the tubing is quite thin - may even use a spool gun with fluxcore - if you want the facility to run flat out then I think the 7.5kw size sounds about right - transformer based machines are not as forgiving & don't seem to run well on generators plus there is a big surge both switching on & off which can hurt a generator - when shopping for generators the cheapest will tend to be inductive brushless things - forget them they are plain nasty in output - safest check is take end off unless you can see enough through air vents - if there are brushes & an AVR you should be good to go - there is more chance of killing the generator than the welder - if you see no brushes & a big capacitor walk away ! it maybe beyond your budget but there are small portable engine drives for odd jobbing that are carry weight for taking around / up buildings etc - often only 150 > 200 amp but for average repairs up to 1/8" rods do fine - most common around here is the Mosa Magiweld series - one man can easily carry the 160amp - powered by just the 6.5hp Honda engine & has aux 110volt power for a grinder - this may suit your work.
I was looking at this one. Not sure its its brushless or not.noddybrian wrote:I recently needed to go the generator route as I have to weld some gates / fencing at a location without power & the only access means carrying all equipment across about 1/2 mile of beach so an engine drive is out ! did some testing as to what size I could get away with - found that inverters mostly use in proportion to the load & manufacturers tend to recommend 1.5 * the maximum load ( which is a sensible ) so I can use smaller than originally thought as I'm only using small rods as the tubing is quite thin - may even use a spool gun with fluxcore - if you want the facility to run flat out then I think the 7.5kw size sounds about right - transformer based machines are not as forgiving & don't seem to run well on generators plus there is a big surge both switching on & off which can hurt a generator - when shopping for generators the cheapest will tend to be inductive brushless things - forget them they are plain nasty in output - safest check is take end off unless you can see enough through air vents - if there are brushes & an AVR you should be good to go - there is more chance of killing the generator than the welder - if you see no brushes & a big capacitor walk away ! it maybe beyond your budget but there are small portable engine drives for odd jobbing that are carry weight for taking around / up buildings etc - often only 150 > 200 amp but for average repairs up to 1/8" rods do fine - most common around here is the Mosa Magiweld series - one man can easily carry the 160amp - powered by just the 6.5hp Honda engine & has aux 110volt power for a grinder - this may suit your work.
https://www.tractorsupply.com/tsc/produ ... tric-start
noddybrian
- noddybrian
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Not sure how useful the dual fuel option is to you so maybe there is a gasoline only version cheaper with same output - still not a bad price - obviously it's a China import & you can likely find same thing cheaper but the warranty from a USA company is probably worth the difference - on the link you have there are questions & answers posted within the last few days so could be worth asking them - sorry without actually seeing it I can't comment on the build & some models can be either with regard to brushless - I never seen this brand as I'm in the UK but it's common here for identical casings to be used for either output type - the thinking is if the unit is sold to a home owner it will likely be fairly smooth with an AVR fitted for more sensitive loads - downside is they are easily damaged by large inductive / reactive loads / high surges & shut off back EMF - maximum short term overload is usually 1.5 times rated load so be careful starting motors etc as they will be far in excess of the run load hence needing a bigger generator than first expected - if sold for commercial / site use then mostly they are brushless with a appalling looking output - only designed to run tools or lighting etc but more robust & will tolerate short term overload of around 3 times rated power so can start motors etc - very simple to repair - only sure way I know of finding which sort you have is take the 2screws out of the end cover & have a look - if this is not possible where you plan to buy from next best is buy from somewhere or on a card so you can take it home have a look - maybe test welder on it & return for refund if it's not what you need.
Downwindtracker2
- Downwindtracker2
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My genny is clean, as in it will run electronics. It's Yammy 2400 watt inverter. But at $1300 USD, it's also pricy. I can carry it, but the though of a flight of stairs..... Try Costco for a Champion 3000 inverter.
Man of foolish pursuits
Millermatic 250x MIG
Magnum (Hugong) Wave 200KD ac/dc TIG
Liquid Air O/A torch
Millermatic 250x MIG
Magnum (Hugong) Wave 200KD ac/dc TIG
Liquid Air O/A torch
Downwindtracker2
- Downwindtracker2
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3000 watts is 25 amps of 120 volts.
Man of foolish pursuits
Millermatic 250x MIG
Magnum (Hugong) Wave 200KD ac/dc TIG
Liquid Air O/A torch
Millermatic 250x MIG
Magnum (Hugong) Wave 200KD ac/dc TIG
Liquid Air O/A torch
A small engine driven welder looks better when pull up to a job site
Most field work typical uses Stick and MIG type welding
Most welders starting out today uses TIG ever one know you just start out
Today if see a lot welders using just generator and a 120 v MIG or TIG you to put good pitcher of being a great welder. Ever you only TIG welding
Dave
Most field work typical uses Stick and MIG type welding
Most welders starting out today uses TIG ever one know you just start out
Today if see a lot welders using just generator and a 120 v MIG or TIG you to put good pitcher of being a great welder. Ever you only TIG welding
Dave
Ant428 wrote:Good afternoon,
I am starting a small welding business and will be doing some mobile repairs. I do mostly TIG in my shop, but when working on gates or heavy metal, I will be stick welding. I use a Lincoln Squarewave 200. My question is should I invest in a small engine driven welder, OR buy a 7500 watt generator and run my Squarewave off that? Lincoln says 7500 watt is fine for that machine.
If I buy a champion generator its only $750, vs 2k for an engine drivin welder.
Any thoughts?
-Anthony
always seemed to me like the combination of a small genset and a MIG machine was a fine way of asking for trouble. If you have a big genset rotating along at speed, and trigger a MIG welder that doesn't cause the genset to momentarily drop rpm, you might have a shot.
On initial triggering, the MIG machine generally draws maximum inrush current, and if the genset is slowing for that, you loose voltage & frequency. It's not a pretty picture on a scope.
If you want to see really ugly combine an inverter power supply on the MIG end with an inverter genset and look at that picture.
On initial triggering, the MIG machine generally draws maximum inrush current, and if the genset is slowing for that, you loose voltage & frequency. It's not a pretty picture on a scope.
If you want to see really ugly combine an inverter power supply on the MIG end with an inverter genset and look at that picture.
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