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The simplest Welding-shop equipment that permits you to perform your work is probably all that you need for getting started. For work on low carbon steel an example would be a simple AC transformer welding power supply. Keep in mind that used and reconditioned equipment may be available at substantial savings.
Fancy looking machines with all sort of additional capabilities may be strongly promoted by suppliers, but the question is if they are going to help your business become more productive and successful. New equipment should be first rented or leased for a short while, to decide if it actually provides benefits.
Besides electric welding equipment, an oxyacetylene welding kit mounted on a hand cart holding two gas cylinders is almost a must for any Welding-shop and maintenance facility. An air compressor may be needed to power pneumatic tools.
Apart from welders you will need accessories, like disc cutters, grinders, welding table with a sturdy vise, files, hammers to remove slag etc. and of course personal protection devices like welding mask, goggles, gloves, apron and so on. See
Welding-shop starting up requirements: all you need to know. Business plan, market research, mapping the road to success. Financing, performance analysis. Location, welding equipment. Customer base.
I am confused......did you just post a question and then answer yourself???
www.facebook.com/outbackaluminumwelding
Miller Dynasty 700...OH YEA BABY!!
MM 350P...PULSE SPRAYIN' MONSTER
Miller Dynasty 280 with AC independent expansion card
Miller Dynasty 200 DX "Blue Lightning"
Miller Bobcat 225 NT (what I began my present Biz with!)
Miller 30-A Spoolgun
Miller WC-115-A
Miller Spectrum 300
Miller 225 Thunderbolt (my first machine bought new 1980)
Miller Digital Elite Titanium 9400
I would think you would need a welder, chop saw, 4 1/2" angle grinder, assorted hand tools (hammer, chisels, wrenches, ratches, sockets, etc), gloves, hood, soapstone, tape measure. That would be a bare minimum to do rudimentary work. I would then add an O/A setup, then air compressor (and air tools), then plasma cutter, then big steel fab table, bench grinder, 'nother welder (need a stick and a mig). There you have a basic shop, then you can shop for the big guns, ironworker, CAD plasma cutter, mill, lathe, sheet metal tools (brake, shear, bead roller, sliproll, etc)
I am somewhere betwixt the two at the moment, and can do most anything, some things just take longer.
I am confused......did you just post a question and then answer yourself???
Uh.... that seems to be the case. move over, give me a little seat space on the bench.
Will it weld? I loooove electricity!
Miller 251/30A spool
Syncro200
Spectrum 625
O/A
Precix 5x10 CNC Router12"Z
Standard modern lathe
Cheap Chinese mill that does the trick... sort of...
horizontal 7x12 bandsaw
Roland XC540 PRO III
54" laminator
hammer and screwdriver (most used)
little dog
pooper scooper (2nd most used...)
I think this is ad spam. Check the link at the bottom of his post....
TacMig
We depend On:
Miller | Esab | Lincoln | Fronius
Baileigh | Drake | Eagle | Knuth
Victor | Harris | Smith | Bessey
Snap-On | Hilti | Ingersoll Rand
Burco/Koco | Onan | BobCat
Tracker | Infratrol | AmeriCast
We belong to or support:
American National Standards Institute
American Welding Society
The Welding Institute
Fabricators & Manufacturing Association Int'l.
Well I just needed some advise and found the article of startup equipment anyone could ad suggestions. I put the link of the article I found but meant no spam. Just need some advice.
Well I just needed some advise and found the article of startup equipment anyone could ad suggestions. I put the link of the article I found but meant no spam. Just need some advice.
Thanks anyway
Didn't mean to offend you! It's that we have had spam here before and your original post along with your reply looked a little odd. In any event, good luck and happy welding.
TacMig
We depend On:
Miller | Esab | Lincoln | Fronius
Baileigh | Drake | Eagle | Knuth
Victor | Harris | Smith | Bessey
Snap-On | Hilti | Ingersoll Rand
Burco/Koco | Onan | BobCat
Tracker | Infratrol | AmeriCast
We belong to or support:
American National Standards Institute
American Welding Society
The Welding Institute
Fabricators & Manufacturing Association Int'l.
a good chop saw is a necessity. A grinder- you can get by with a 4 1/2" grinder but make sure you get a good one because if not you will replace them on a regular basis. torch setup.
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