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  • 1979 Miller MIG?

    In 1979 I was very young, I had a partner in a moonlight business. We bought a few "wreck kits". A salvage yard in Worchester Mass. put together wrecked cars and the pieces of donor cars needed to rebuild them. Most were cut and weld projects. There were a few dents to pound out, but most were clips. We reasoned that one manufacturer would be a good way to go. We chose BMW. We did a 2002 Tii, a 530i my mother drove another 19? years, a 320i my friend drove 12 years. It was fun! It didn't prove to be profitable as we never sold the cars. I fell in love, filled my spare time with a pretty girl who's now my beautiful wife, and couldn't spare the time. My partner and I got on each other's nerves and dissolved.

    We rented a MIG. It was a Miller, I remember it as about the footprint of a modern Bobcat, but taller. It cost in 1979 about $4000 dollars equipped to work, and worked incredibly well.

    I can't remember the model. What did Miller offer in the day?
    Dynasty 280DX
    Bobcat 250
    MM252
    Spool gun
    Twentieth Century 295
    Twentieth Century 295 AC
    Marquette spot welder
    Smith torches

  • #2
    Originally posted by WillieB View Post
    In 1979 I was very young, I had a partner in a moonlight business. We bought a few "wreck kits". A salvage yard in Worchester Mass. put together wrecked cars and the pieces of donor cars needed to rebuild them. Most were cut and weld projects. There were a few dents to pound out, but most were clips. We reasoned that one manufacturer would be a good way to go. We chose BMW. We did a 2002 Tii, a 530i my mother drove another 19? years, a 320i my friend drove 12 years. It was fun! It didn't prove to be profitable as we never sold the cars. I fell in love, filled my spare time with a pretty girl who's now my beautiful wife, and couldn't spare the time. My partner and I got on each other's nerves and dissolved.

    We rented a MIG. It was a Miller, I remember it as about the footprint of a modern Bobcat, but taller. It cost in 1979 about $4000 dollars equipped to work, and worked incredibly well.

    I can't remember the model. What did Miller offer in the day?
    Willie

    For that time period the 2 most popular MIG machines were the MM35 & MM200

    Millermatic 35



    Millermatic 200



    Anything look familiar..??...
    Last edited by H80N; 04-15-2015, 04:28 PM.
    .

    *******************************************
    The more you know, The better you know, How little you know

    “The bitterness of poor quality remains long after the sweetness of low price is forgotten”

    Buy the best tools you can afford.. Learn to use them to the best of your ability.. and take care of them...

    My Blue Stuff:
    Dynasty 350DX Tigrunner
    Dynasty 200DX
    Millermatic 350P w/25ft Alumapro & 30A
    Millermatic 200

    TONS of Non-Blue Equip, plus CNC Mill, Lathes & a Plasmacam w/ PowerMax-1000

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by H80N View Post
      Willie

      For that time period the 2 most popular MIG machines were the MM35 & MM200

      Millermatic 35



      Millermatic 200



      Anything look familiar..??...
      The sketches are so similar. They look so different up on a cart with tank(s).
      Dynasty 280DX
      Bobcat 250
      MM252
      Spool gun
      Twentieth Century 295
      Twentieth Century 295 AC
      Marquette spot welder
      Smith torches

      Comment


      • #4
        The pulstar 450 came out in 1979 and would have been expensive.
        (or did you have a mig with a big silver crank on the front?)


        Attached Files
        "Beware of false knowledge; it is more dangerous than ignorance." ~George Bernard Shaw~

        Airco 300 Heliwelder
        Dialarc 250 AC/DC
        ESAB 161
        Invertec v250 and v300 Pro
        SA200
        Spectrum 700 plasma
        MM210
        Miller HF-15-1
        Dirty ugly tools - perfect

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        • #5
          Originally posted by MinnesotaDave View Post
          The pulstar 450 came out in 1979 and would have been expensive.
          (or did you have a mig with a big silver crank on the front?)


          Are you implying I'm old? No I don't think I had to crank it. I think it might have been it. Knowing me, I might have sales literature here someplace. I was in awe of its behavior. Until then, electric welding of very thin metals had been less than satisfactory.
          Dynasty 280DX
          Bobcat 250
          MM252
          Spool gun
          Twentieth Century 295
          Twentieth Century 295 AC
          Marquette spot welder
          Smith torches

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by WillieB View Post
            Are you implying I'm old? .
            .....I turned 27 in 1979...

            and you feel old..??...
            .

            *******************************************
            The more you know, The better you know, How little you know

            “The bitterness of poor quality remains long after the sweetness of low price is forgotten”

            Buy the best tools you can afford.. Learn to use them to the best of your ability.. and take care of them...

            My Blue Stuff:
            Dynasty 350DX Tigrunner
            Dynasty 200DX
            Millermatic 350P w/25ft Alumapro & 30A
            Millermatic 200

            TONS of Non-Blue Equip, plus CNC Mill, Lathes & a Plasmacam w/ PowerMax-1000

            Comment


            • #7
              My limited partner at the time was a big believer in lying big. He always had to arrange a meeting with the boss of everybody we wanted to do business with. He'd lay on the BS DEEP! The welder was the best Miller had to offer. I would marvel that if I could read the line of BS, why couldn't these business men? He'd tell people we were going to buy 10 cars a year from them, or we were definitely buying a top of the line MIG, we just hadn't chosen between Lincoln and Miller. That part really rubbed me the wrong way! Using the Miller did not.
              Dynasty 280DX
              Bobcat 250
              MM252
              Spool gun
              Twentieth Century 295
              Twentieth Century 295 AC
              Marquette spot welder
              Smith torches

              Comment


              • #8
                Willie

                if the welder was an "All in One" .... that is power supply and feeder combined in a single box .... rather than separate supply and feeder...

                Then it was quite likely a MillerMatic-200... it was considered a big deal in it's day... (still a heck of a machine..)

                Here is a link to some pics of an earlier "White Face" version...

                This is my millermatic 200 in cosmetically decent but great working condition. Does not come with a tank but regulator is included. I just put in new drive gears and new liner. I'm still using this to date and have no problems. I just bought a Hobart 210 and really don't need 2. Asking 700.00


                You probably bought yours at Merriam Graves....
                .

                *******************************************
                The more you know, The better you know, How little you know

                “The bitterness of poor quality remains long after the sweetness of low price is forgotten”

                Buy the best tools you can afford.. Learn to use them to the best of your ability.. and take care of them...

                My Blue Stuff:
                Dynasty 350DX Tigrunner
                Dynasty 200DX
                Millermatic 350P w/25ft Alumapro & 30A
                Millermatic 200

                TONS of Non-Blue Equip, plus CNC Mill, Lathes & a Plasmacam w/ PowerMax-1000

                Comment


                • #9
                  Rick Petty at Merriam Graves, Or it might have been earlier when it was still Grady Welding Supply. In the day I used to go often for O2 and acetylene. Did a lot of body work back then. I was tormented by the distortion of acetylene welding. The alternative was pop rivets. Those cars rusted out six months later. I'm amazed, there is a 73 Ford pickup I did cab corners, rockers, fenders, and door skins in maybe 77. It led a hard life, and the farmer took it off the road a couple years ago. I am a big fan of coating the inside with Texaco rustproofing grease. You probably don't approve, dealing with classic cars, but the stuff lasts 10 years longer than stone.
                  Dynasty 280DX
                  Bobcat 250
                  MM252
                  Spool gun
                  Twentieth Century 295
                  Twentieth Century 295 AC
                  Marquette spot welder
                  Smith torches

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by WillieB View Post
                    ..... I'm amazed, there is a 73 Ford pickup I did cab corners, rockers, fenders, and door skins in maybe 77. It led a hard life, and the farmer took it off the road a couple years ago. I am a big fan of coating the inside with Texaco rustproofing grease. You probably don't approve, dealing with classic cars, but the stuff lasts 10 years longer than stone.
                    I sure have no problem using MIG and Rust-Proofing on work vehicles...
                    (I spent enough Vermont winters to marvel at how quickly a new vehicle could dissolve from the salt)

                    But I do prefer TIG for restorations or any automotive sheetmetal where you want an undetectable repair...

                    .

                    *******************************************
                    The more you know, The better you know, How little you know

                    “The bitterness of poor quality remains long after the sweetness of low price is forgotten”

                    Buy the best tools you can afford.. Learn to use them to the best of your ability.. and take care of them...

                    My Blue Stuff:
                    Dynasty 350DX Tigrunner
                    Dynasty 200DX
                    Millermatic 350P w/25ft Alumapro & 30A
                    Millermatic 200

                    TONS of Non-Blue Equip, plus CNC Mill, Lathes & a Plasmacam w/ PowerMax-1000

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      No arguments there. Mig would have been less distortion than acetylene. TIG would have been like dying and going to heaven. I used MIG on only one job in those days. I didn't have an available $4000. $4000 was 1/5 the price of my home. It was more than my parents paid for their house. Most of my sheet metal was done with acetylene. I'd weld a tack, then hit it with compressed air to minimize the spread of HAZ. Straightening after all the dots were connected, meant grinding, then hammer and dolly. Only the BMWs and one Ford Tempo bought in a weak moment were wrecks. All others were rust buckets. What I thought you wouldn't approve was the grease.
                      Dynasty 280DX
                      Bobcat 250
                      MM252
                      Spool gun
                      Twentieth Century 295
                      Twentieth Century 295 AC
                      Marquette spot welder
                      Smith torches

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Come to think of it In the seventies I knew of a mysterious process called heliarc. I was led to believe it was done in a chamber like a sandblast cabinet using "plasma." To me at the time, plasma was "ball lightning", something very mysterious!

                        The only thing I had seen heliarc welded was an aluminum distributor from my 1960 Mercedes. It was smuggled into GE, welded, and returned to me polished, and the repair undetectable.
                        Dynasty 280DX
                        Bobcat 250
                        MM252
                        Spool gun
                        Twentieth Century 295
                        Twentieth Century 295 AC
                        Marquette spot welder
                        Smith torches

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Heliarc is tig with a helium mix, is it not? That's what I have been thinking every time I hear somebody say heliarc at least, haha.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            TIG/GTAW/HELIARC welding

                            Originally posted by Cgotto6 View Post
                            Heliarc is tig with a helium mix, is it not? That's what I have been thinking every time I hear somebody say heliarc at least, haha.
                            Here is a short article on the history of TIG/GTAW/HELIARC welding

                            TIG Heliarc welding was deloped for aircraft production in WW II


                            .

                            *******************************************
                            The more you know, The better you know, How little you know

                            “The bitterness of poor quality remains long after the sweetness of low price is forgotten”

                            Buy the best tools you can afford.. Learn to use them to the best of your ability.. and take care of them...

                            My Blue Stuff:
                            Dynasty 350DX Tigrunner
                            Dynasty 200DX
                            Millermatic 350P w/25ft Alumapro & 30A
                            Millermatic 200

                            TONS of Non-Blue Equip, plus CNC Mill, Lathes & a Plasmacam w/ PowerMax-1000

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Heliarc I believe is synonymous with TIG. In the seventies we had no internet. VT didn't have a lot of educated weldors, Knowledge of this process was locally inside the walls of GE at its jet engine plant in Rutland. Things were secret military where that plant was concerned. I think in an earlier day of oil well drilling use of helium either pure or mixed with argon was more common.

                              I once had a TIG torch built in 1984 labeled "Genuine Heliarc" The identical torch was later built by Weldcraft.
                              Dynasty 280DX
                              Bobcat 250
                              MM252
                              Spool gun
                              Twentieth Century 295
                              Twentieth Century 295 AC
                              Marquette spot welder
                              Smith torches

                              Comment

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