|
|
Last week, the following ad appeared in the local Craigslist Free section and although I was a bit late, I had to reply. I was later told that many quickly replied, most saying essentially "I want it and can come now to get it". I tend to be long winded and to give a few more details including that it looked to be a classic and needed to be restored, then used.... Anyway, here's the ad:

It turned out that the unit was left on the property when sold so little history about it was known. A second person, who apparently was visiting the new resident at the 100 year old house, happened to spend his spare time collecting/documenting historical information, so my telling him tales of the area and the companies and people I knew of took more time than getting the machine.Below are pictures of the welder's company name, one of the data plate, and then some of the whole machine:




After loading it, I had a minor problem. After I passed on more information about other old equipment, building some copies of the Wright Bros. 1908 Model B engines, and mentioning the project about redesigning (and producing) upgraded Model A engines, only then was I asked if I wanted the second welder. The second is an old Craftsman AC unit ..... but I seem to need to start a new thread in order to show the pictures of it prior to being loaded for the required Second Trip Home from the area. When I first saw the picture of the welder in the ad, I assumed the unit was made by Miller; I was wrong. The Birdsell company, about which I so far have found little information, was a very local concern, being less than a mile from the old Sears store(I remember the planting of palm trees there when the building was new, back in the latter 1950's) and probably lasting not much longer than that. I found an ad on Ebay of another Birdsell welder, its unclear picture showing a data plate that appears even older, the company address on it looking like the nearby town of Los Altos.Some of the wire insulation inside my unit is long gone, so it will need a good disassembly, cleaning, and replacement of that wiring, at the least. The main transformer may also need some care but with the low voltages, I hope insulation breakdown isn't the problem it could be with high voltages.Besides asking if members here have any information about either the company or this specific model, are there any welding associations or similar outfits that might? Where is the best place to get general information about spot welders like this, particularly settings?In case the data plate isn't clear enough, it reads 220v, 65amps, single phase 1.5 K.V.A. |
|