Thanks for all of the discussion and advise. I do have the wire feeder, along with a couple of large rolls of wire, 1 of them is .035 flux core (E71T) and the other is .030 (AWS/SF A5.18). I do not have a bottle yet so I will be using the flux core for the near future. I have looked at the site with all of the powcon manuals and they are the same files that I already have. Thanks for that link. Way back in the days of wooden ships and iron men, (when I was doing build up on the cement mixer), that rotary welder would burn rod that was bigger than my finger! All I had to do was strike the arc and the machine did the rest. As far as I know, there was no duty cycle limit on the thing. I would start on Sunday morning about 7 am and weld until about 1 or 2 in the afternoon. The one thing that I didn't like about welding is that inside that mask, you are not aware of your surroundings. My dad or brother would come over to bring lunch and just plain scare the crap out of me.
I do understand the downside of shortening the stick cables but shop is very small for what I have in it. (Grizzly G4003g lathe, SB Heavy 10 lathe, Grizzly G0695 vertical mill, Atlas MFC horizontal mill, a steel workbench with a huge vise that I use as my press, this welder, an O/A set, bench grinder, drill press and various roll around tool boxes) All of that stuff is in half of a 2 car garage. The limiting factor for me is that my wife's car must fit in the garage! I am currently desperately looking for a place for a little 4 x 10 metal cutting bandsaw. There is just not room for a large coil of cables unless I get rid of some machines (the atlas mill and grizzly lathe are candidates) The welder's final resting place will be under the steel workbench. I plan on a cable directly attached to that bench so I can just use the vise to hold the work and weld right there.
Just for fun, I would like to try and learn TIG welding and need a recommendation for a TIG torch to use with this machine. Is there a gas mix that will work with both TIG and MIG? Any and all input is welcome. I do appreciate your sharing your experience with me.
Thanks,
Earl