Looking to upgrade from my Lincoln 175 plus mig welder. If I go with Miller, I want the Millermatic 212. Which Everlast mig welder is the closest comparable? Any help would be appreciated.
Printable View
Looking to upgrade from my Lincoln 175 plus mig welder. If I go with Miller, I want the Millermatic 212. Which Everlast mig welder is the closest comparable? Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks for the reply. I am looking to to weld 3/8" steel & Aluminum. Don't care about the weight, it will be on a cart dedicated to the shop. Quick and easy changed from steel to aluminum is important, along with a long reach. Will be used in a light fab shop.
The IMIG 250P will do that with ease. I added a 20' profax gun for longer reach and made a hanger for my leads.
I've since changed the MIG gun's front end parts from 21 style to 23 style that comes on the "HD" gun because the screw on nozzles stay centered. The work clamp pictured is made by Stronghand.
You can use a spoolgun for aluminum and the machine also stick welds.
Attachment 12699Attachment 12705Attachment 12700Attachment 12701Attachment 12702Attachment 12703Attachment 12704
Thank you! Very nice set up. Do you have any problem with thin metal 1/16", 1/8" ? The price $1200 is creeping up toward the millermatic 212 @ $1730. I have the Plasma 60S, love it. Thinking of buying the PowerTIG 200DX. Figure I buy me a good mig, I would be set. The Power i-MIG 205 might be enough mig for me, but it just don't seem much more of an upgrade from my licoln 175plus.
If you are not going to be mobile. 205P or 205. You can still pick them up but need a little more generator. I also have a 250P, like Zoama, would never part with. Our MIGs are a little pricey, but all of our products are great welders, it just cost more to make a good MIG.
Attachment 12708
The 250 is actually a better choice for the average customer. It has spot and stitch timer along with burn back and arc force control. The 250P's shortfall is that it does not have a synergic and double pulse. It's manually set, and for the average person too difficult to set correctly.
I'd look at the 205. It is portable and will work well about anywhere you have 240V available. The unit would be more in line with the 212 performance except the 212 has a larger maximum roll diameter.
Sure wished the 250p had Spot and Stitch. Hmm, while I am wishing, like to be taller.
The standard 250 does have it. Now I think you misunderstood what I said from your earlier comment...or I misunderstood your statement. The 250P is a single pulse not a double one and does not make the stepped look that people think of with a slow pulse on a TIG. (Stack o' Dimes) And again, it is difficult to set unless you know what you are doing.
Thanks Mark. I understand the differance between the two. Went and played with a Millermatic 212 today. The On Gun Demand is a very sweet feature. Both guns are hooked up,and you just grab the gun you want and pull the trigger, steel or aluminum, sure is a great feature. Tough decision. The 250P is a lot more machine, with more options. Especially when it come to keeping the heat away from the aluminum. The Millermatic 212 is dumbed down for the weekend worror. But very clean and thought out.
I ruled out the IMIG-250P after finding out there is no spool gun available, and I would have to change out one roll of wire to the other to switch from steel to aluminum. Not crazy at all about pushing aluminum wire. So I am considering the IMIG-250. Would it be possible to have both the mig gun and the spool gun connected at the same time, running the spool gun argon line to the regulated argon tank. Just turning the argon on and plugging the spool gun into the port since there is no toggle switch from mig to aluminum? Will any of the other brand spool guns work with the IMIG-250?
Yes there is a spool gun available. Who said that? Same gun is used on 250 and 250P. Zoama even talked about it himself. The older models did not have a spool gun capability, but since the last 3 or 4 years they have. In fact you can see the spool gun connected to the plug in Mike's photo above with the denim cover. But, You cannot have the connected at the same time. They use the same connection point using the Euro connector. It literally takes 60 seconds to change the gun out...no tools required.
What I want to get away from is the setup my old Lincoln 175 mig has. I have to cut the wire, pull out the mig gun, replace it with the spool gun. store the mig gun. Then when I want to go back to steel, switch them back, rethread the wire. seems simple, pain in the @$$. I must of been looking at an old post on the IMIG250P.
This won't get you there. But the Euro connection is much faster and easier than Miller or Lincoln's standard setup. The wire doesn't have to be cut, it can just be rolled back with a few easy turns on the wire spool after you release the tension. The wire never has to leave the wire feeder due to the design...and it stays threaded. Never thought of it as a pain for sure...fairly quick and simple.