Hi,
I bought a Millermatic 135 a few years ago to learn to weld for hobby stuff around the house. I’ve learned to do reasonably well on thicker gage material but still struggle to dial in setting, especially on thinner gage metal.
My cousin bought a Millermatic 211 and let me borrow to compare. I thought it would either help me learn to better dial in my machine or buy a new welder. It was interesting.
The 211 was definitely easier to set up and made a nice hissing bacon frying sort of sound. On thicker material, I could dial my 135 in to make, to my eye, an equally nice bead with similar penetration. The difference was in the sound. My 135 has a “deeper” sort of frying sound vs the 211’s higher pitched “ssss” sort of sound. (I know it’s hard to describe in words - sorry)
Is this because the 211 is more forgiving of my technique and a more experienced welder could setup & manage the arc on the 135 to get same sound? Or is it the difference between the inverter in the 211 and whatever’s in my 135 (a transformer?). Or perhaps a bit of both?
I’m trying to decide if, for someone like me - the occasional hobbyist with goal of being good enough to do some body work on my old car, a newer welder would make me more successful or the 135 is perfectly good and it’s a matter or more practice?
Thanks in advance for any advice.
I bought a Millermatic 135 a few years ago to learn to weld for hobby stuff around the house. I’ve learned to do reasonably well on thicker gage material but still struggle to dial in setting, especially on thinner gage metal.
My cousin bought a Millermatic 211 and let me borrow to compare. I thought it would either help me learn to better dial in my machine or buy a new welder. It was interesting.
The 211 was definitely easier to set up and made a nice hissing bacon frying sort of sound. On thicker material, I could dial my 135 in to make, to my eye, an equally nice bead with similar penetration. The difference was in the sound. My 135 has a “deeper” sort of frying sound vs the 211’s higher pitched “ssss” sort of sound. (I know it’s hard to describe in words - sorry)
Is this because the 211 is more forgiving of my technique and a more experienced welder could setup & manage the arc on the 135 to get same sound? Or is it the difference between the inverter in the 211 and whatever’s in my 135 (a transformer?). Or perhaps a bit of both?
I’m trying to decide if, for someone like me - the occasional hobbyist with goal of being good enough to do some body work on my old car, a newer welder would make me more successful or the 135 is perfectly good and it’s a matter or more practice?
Thanks in advance for any advice.