CJhaughey wrote: » I think those are gasless mig not gas fed AFAIK. You just need a spool of flux core wire, there is a very small spool included I think.
unattendedbag wrote: » I took a chance and bought one. Comes with bottle of gas but according to Instructions I can use MIG, TIG and MMA welding. I suppose that's why it's called 4 in 1 welder. It'll be interesting trying these out and seeing the difference. Is there anywhere I can go to get a refill of gas when it runs out? It's a 0.95litre bottle.https://www.lidl.ie/en/p/diy-projects/4-in-1-compact-welder/p41660
BrownFinger wrote: » I dont know about the small bottles but wholesalewelding supplier delivered gas to me before ,
unattendedbag wrote: » There's a mig welder in lidl on sale tomorrow. Was thinking of getting it. Just DIY work in shed. What's the story with the litre bottle of Argon gas. How long would it last and where would I get it refilled when it runs out? The main reason of picking MIG over a stick welder would (hopefully) be getting a tidier job on small projects.
creedp wrote: » Intended buying one of these for a few DIY projects but missed out on it. They still have the €100 inverter 80a arc welder in stock. Is it any use orwould I be better off waiting until they or Aldi get the Mig in again?
CJhaughey wrote: » Was two in my Local Lidl today, went in for a few BBQ items and came out with the welder, my teenage daughter wasn't impressed! I'm going to run a few rods through it and see what its like on stick. I will order a bigger spool of flux core 0.8 tomorrow to see what that works like. When I can get a chance I'll get a big bottle of gas.
CJhaughey wrote: » If you only want to weld thicker materials >5mm consider a 160amp inverter MMA welder, you can get packages for around 300 from most of the bigger online welding supply places. If you plan on welding thinner materials then you will probably be better off with a MIG.
creedp wrote: » Thanks for advice. I was in Lidl a couple of days back and picked up the last of the 80amp arc welder - afraid I'd miss out on a bargain!! Anyway following your advice I did some reading up on this issue and it seems easy enough to pick up a 120 - 160amp arc welder for under €150. Would I be mad to hold onto this 80amp welder when I can get a more powerful one for very little more?
CJhaughey wrote: » There is not real issue with smaller welder, just do multi passes if you think you need more strength. What exactly are you welding?
DublinDilbert wrote: » Bought a very cheap inverter welder off bang-good last year, only got to power it upt a few weeks back. Very impressed with it, no problem with 3mm stick.
creedp wrote: » Lidl have another arc welder advertised for next Thursday at €49.99. What is the difference between this one and the €99 one they had for sale a couple of weeks ago? Also is the parkside auto weld helmet any good?
SuperTortoise wrote: » As already stated it will be transformer based, and no, it it not worth buying, even at €50 Buy a inverter based welder, they are lighter, quick change settings, and it's very hard to go wrong with them, you'd buy a 180a welder for €150 that would be plenty good enough as long as you're not firing 4mm rods through it one after the other. Buy decent branded consumables, wire/rods/tips etc etc, the cheap stuff is terrible and the stuff they send you in the same box as the welder is especially terrible.
CJhaughey wrote: » I can't see you having a problem with 2.5 rods, 80 amps is plenty for most light projects. I got a pack of the lidl rods in 2.0 and 2.5 and they weld fine, i haven't tried them overhead but in most positions I used them in so far they were fine, they were fresh and dry as well, not damp old stuff.