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Can someone tell me in volts what the A,B,C,D,E heat settings stand for.thanks
Reply:Do you have a cheap voltmeter?City of L.A. Structural; Manual & Semi-Automatic;"Surely there is a mine for silver, and a place where gold is refined. Iron is taken from the earth, and copper is smelted from ore."Job 28:1,2Lincoln, Miller, Victor & ISV BibleDanny
Reply:yes i do have one.
Reply:Before I suggest anything further, what machine do you have? OK, I answered my own question, it's a 180 T Lincoln, right? What does the manual tell you? It will be range from such and such to so and so......Ok a search turned up a range of 17-20 volts from the spec sheet on the machine. The settings are going to fall in that range. I don't know if I feel comfortable telling anyone to clamp a voltmeter test lead to the filler wire and pull the trigger, it may get your meter all melty like!Last edited by tanglediver; 04-20-2008 at 12:27 AM.City of L.A. Structural; Manual & Semi-Automatic;"Surely there is a mine for silver, and a place where gold is refined. Iron is taken from the earth, and copper is smelted from ore."Job 28:1,2Lincoln, Miller, Victor & ISV BibleDanny
Reply:They are:HotHottereven HotterHottest
Reply:It has been a long time since I looked at the manual on one of those but there may be a chart. It will probably give a range for each one. Length of stick out can be used to regulate it within the range to some extent. They won't give you an absolute because every machine is slightly different.The difference between art and craft is the quality of the workmanship. I am an artist.
Reply:Originally Posted by tanglediver...Ok a search turned up a range of 17-20 volts from the spec sheet on the machine. The settings are going to fall in that range. I don't know if I feel comfortable telling anyone to clamp a voltmeter test lead to the filler wire and pull the trigger, it may get your meter all melty like! |
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