Maybe you could get rid of the perocity by giving the rebar a good clean, like get rid of the rust off it. Would like to see how it welds an actually weld, like a butt weld or something
Suddenly I realize my $1,500 tig welder was not expensive and I no longer feel hesitant to pay $250 for a pickup bed crane to lift my generator. Thank you for the very interesting look into your business and I wish you the best!!!
@@nickfowler429 when you touch the grounded metal you want to weld into with the rebar, it creates an arc of electricity and this arc is hot enough to melt the rebar smaw or stick is the exact same thing but the flux around the electrode obviously helps and improves the weld in many ways
Yep, I use to believe that statement, being a welder for over 50 yrs that's all we used in the shops was Miller equip. Then as I got close to retirement I decided to buy me a Miller Trailblazer so I could do all the types of welding around the house,,,,, boy what a mistake. The motor runs great,,, the generator side, not so much. The engineering side of the generator sucks at best,,, the gen. won't talk to the engine,, burned out board,,, after using it for less than a 100 hrs., mach sitting in garage with a cover on it. Miller wanted over $1000 bucks for the board,,,, ughhh,,, so I bought the board,,,, 50 hrs later,,,, nope won't work again. You'd think Miller would back their crap up, but nope, you're on your own. My son bought the same mach a coulpe of yrs later, his works fine, you could see the "engineering design changes to make it dependable and actually work, what a novel idea. So I have a huge paper weight that "runs" but doesn't work and I'm DONE with Miller and I'll bad mouth them every chance I get,,, will not make their junk work. '
I would have guessed $30k.... just shows how long I've been out of the business. You'll have that paid off pretty quick with all those earthmovers you have to fix. love the videos.
Some people may wonder why you spent so much on the welder but you can never have to much power with the heavy machines you work on and as you say you can employ 4 welders in 1 go, the welding with half inch re-bar that was totally mind blowing to watch thank you for another great video.
Unfortunately the same people complain when public agencies spend money on seemingly expensive stuff. :P Not understanding that to be able to do the wanted things the most efficient way sometimes requires quite a capital outlay upfront. :|
It's unfortunate you two have such beliefs. My experience from having worked in both public and private sector is that there's often little difference when you're dealing with the same size orgs.
In 1954 my dad bought a big welder on a home made frame, the welder was for my Grandfather in Colorado. Dad towed it behind a 1950 Ford, it was so heavy (no brakes on welder) that it would push the car around real bad in the mountains! Couldn't go faster than 45 mph, welder would fish tail. Dad was so stressed out, bitting at Mom and us kid's took 4 days to deliver it to Grandad.DAD said I'm never doing that again!! You got a kick butt welder. Thank you for showing it to us!
Brakes like everything else except styling on those old cars and trucks were terrible. That's why there were "brake shops" at the bottom of many long grades. It was impressive what junk the auto industry sold to cut production costs. The really brave guys were the truckers who had to deal with terrible tech every day. Those who never worked on those fossils have no idea.
Wow! No, no questions about it paying for itself. The kind of work you do and the number of jobs you have clearly justify the purchase. Looking forward to seeing using it in the field. Congratulations!
You are very right, although...if one of those many options goes bad you loose the whole unit to service and nobody works then. So long as he has many others waiting in the background of his shop as back ups he'll be fine. A guy like me always had to have an immediate backup plan in the case of being on a critical job with all the college white hats walking around like moronic zombies and my machine having problems exactly when it was time for me to swing the bat, this happened more than once in my 35 yrs of welding. Luckily I always had other machines waiting in the wind only an hour or so away at most to save the day for me!
@@bjorker40 I assume someone like him will have backup machines, older machines, other machines if necessary. Being a college white hat I won't take offense at your words. 😂
I’m jealous! My Bobcat 260 efi is probably all I need, but man, that thing sure is purdy!!! Efficiency, fuel savings vs. running 2 or 3 trucks to the same location, plasma cutting, and a rotary screw compressor….you’ve upped your capacity big time, and it will pay off over and over again over the next few years. Congratulations, Greg!
So awesome. I was grinning ear to ear watching you unbox and set that bad boy up. Good on you and thanks for sharing such an awesome machine with us. 👍
Bless You Sir! You don’t have to validate your position! You know what you need! I’m very happy for you, may you be successful in all your ventures! I too love this Motor Generator Welding system, I will have one as soon as I can; for my needs as well, been eyeing it for a while !
What a BEAST !!!!!!!!! Great purchase and as stated the pay back is quick. I had another well known brand for years and was tired of replacing parts. Bought a Miller and never looked back. Great welder and fantastic customer service.
I have a Millermatic 175..... I am so pleased for you that business has been good and you can afford it and that the future is no holds barred for you. What a machine.
I've seen 1/2" welding rods being use in Norfolk VA. ship yards to repair 3" & 4" thick cast steel housings. Those aren't the biggest though there is one out there at a meter long and 1" thick. A heavy monster welding stick.
A buddy of mine's family had a huge salvage yard and he and his dad picked up a few semi-loads of the monstrous power supply units (Miiller, Lincoln and other brands) many years ago that ran those types of rods. All were 1000 to 1600 amps continuous duty rated! They got them cheap, too cheap. Turned out they were all garbage because the huge transformers and buss bars in them were all copper-clad aluminum which is worthless to try and recycle even for professional scrappers like them. They're both dead now and the scrap yard is running at bare minimum, but there are still piles of those things lying in the trees slowly rusting away today because they are literally not worth the costs do anything with them.
I was just lottery shopping this model online and I’m not a welder by trade. I’d go for the trailblazer 302 airpak and all the accs. suitcase mig etc. Because lottery 💰💰means some smaller heavy equipment to maintain. 😊 You are in my welding viewing rotation with IC Weld and CEE. Nice rig and congrats on your business.
awesome! You deserve it sir. You are such a hard worker and are so skilled. I remember back in the 80's I bought a brand new Miller Legend portable welder, I was so proud of that. I had a smaller welding shop. I eventually got into law enforcement and made a career of that for the next 30 years as a deputy sheriff. I always missed the welding and machining. Now that im retired I have a shop full of welding and machining equipment again and am enjoying life. I really enjoy your videos.
It would be kinda fun to see how well a good welder can do without *any* of the right tools. Car batteries , jumper cables, vise-grips, rebar, maybe a pile of borax/sand for flux? Then compare that to someone who has never welded before and hasn't had any more training than they need to avoid being a safety risk.
Bare electrodes were always run electrode neg [DC-] runs smoother less spatter, back in the 20's-30's before coated electrode...Just say'n, NICE WELDER!
Nice machine. There is also a lot to be said about the personal satisfaction of having a nice piece of equipment that makes your life easier. And it's never a bad thing to show up on a job site with nice equipment. Congrats!
I have a Miller #Multimatic215 and I love Welding with 220 V. Congratulations on your 800 duo pack. Looking forward to your next video with 5 guys Welding off of 1 machine.
You took me down memory lane. Grew up in a welding shop in the 70’s, my dad welded pressure vessels at a couple of places in East Texas (Bakers Tank which is till outside Tyler) and over in Henderson at a big tank mfg, (Southwest Tank?). Cataracts eventually got him out of welding. I went a diff career path, “Mamas don’t let your boys grow up to be welders!”; (Texas heat’ll make ya want a cushy desk job, swamp coolers don’t cut it). One of my younger brothers worked at Tyler Welding Supply, funny thing is he never wanted anything to do with the shop growing up. We had a portable Miller arc for the truck, looks like the hue of blue ain’t changed much, I rember the day it came home all nice and shiny & starting it fer the 1st time. Most guys around our area were Lincoln users. Slogging through mud welding on broken down tractors/dozers/etc, scrapping/recycling oil derricks, building round bale carriers, water bumpers for tractors, bulk contract work such as kiln racks for Kilgore Ceramics, Carpet “elevators” for Pope & Turners in Overton; hadn’t thought about that in a while. Left for university in the “big city” in ‘81. Had been working at Shore Oil Refinery/Cannery in Kilgore after getting out of high school to save up money for school. Mucked spills, hooked up tank trucks for loading (oil/gas), washed/loaded rigs, rode shotgun on rigs to help (eg keep them awake) drivers loadin from tanks in the field (think hooking up & dragging hoses through 18” of muck), worked the cannery and also helped with site construction projects mainly w a guy named Travis…also usually got drug into welders helper/gophering for the contract welding crews. A few months or so after I left, heard there was a major accident. The welders hadn’t flushed the fumes adequately from a holding tank they were inside working on. Travis and one of the welders survived w severe burns and were brought up to a burn unit in Dallas. but one welder did not. “Blacky” (never did know his real name), the head foreman/site manager .. a Stetson wearing/steel nail chewing/cussing lanky old fellar, passed from a heart attack when the explosion occurred. Be careful out there guys. Still do a bit of project welding but nothing big. Being round welding growing up taught me a lot. Much later in life all that gave me the nads to start our own small product prototyping/mfg shop (3D Cad/Cam, woodworking, VMCs, CNC routers, 3D printing, etc). Probably never would have done it if I hadn’t grown up in that 30x40 welding shop that took over our driveway. I’ve seen some large welding rods (think they were like 3/4” X 18-24” or so (was decades ago) but never seen welding w rebar, that’s a first. Long & short of it…Nice rig 👍
Miller does the best job of mixing modern day computational power with old school reliability and it results in the most reliable and robust products. Love them.
Nice. Looks fairly tidy under the covers too, which is important. Surprised how close the gen exhaust was to what looked like the two inverter unit heat sinks but the exhaust looked fairly well insulated and those heat sinks are massive. Plus I expect there's decent airflow within, from the radiator fan. Thanks for sharing.
Saw a demo once of a Miller Big Blue 251D where they took the ground and the stinger attached it to a 1” steel bar and went to lunch. Dead short for an hour. Unit didn’t even bog down.
That’s how “Stick Welding “ got its start. The first welders would dip there bare rods into a brine water solution so the (sodium-6010, potassium-6011) salt would burn a shielding gas plume to help prevent your “rebar porosity”.
These size of machines are excellent for heavy duty welding or gouging, can run .072 FCAW-S for hours without a hitch or gouging with 1/2” rod is very smooth.