Continuing with the theme of sheet metal tools, I decided to add a spot welder to my arsenal.
Admittedly the motivation here is partly "they're really cheap" but I also have a project coming up where being able to weld together pieces of sheet metal will be preferable to riveting them in some spots. But more on that in a later blog post, for now let's get this thing out of the box and test it out.
Yup, looks like a spot welder. Interestingly the instructions seem to imply that the time required for a weld is at least partially dependent on operator skill, which is an interesting take.
Since this is a 240v welder they apparently decided that there's too many different options for 240v plugs so they just ship it without one. So, $20 added to the final price to make up for that, I guess.
Well no worries, on it goes.
Now I can just plug it into the 240v outlet in my car hole which is right over... wait a minute.
Just kidding, I actually did this on purpose. My TIG welder also uses a 6-50p, and I have an adapter that goes to 10-30p.
I could have bought the 10-30p plug for this, but I eventually want to put in a proper 50a 6-50r receptacle, so swapping the plug end out again later would just end up being a waste.
Of course this spot welder only requires 16a so all of this is overkill, but it's much more convenient than trying to figure out how to power a 120v spot welder since most of those require a 40a 120v circuit, and who even has those?
Anyway, time to stick some metal together, so we'll grab some scraps of 26ga galvanized.
Spot welding is really nice for galvanized since it doesn't boil off nearly as much of the zinc as other welding processes, so you don't have to strip off the plating or take extreme measures to avoid inhaling the fumes.
Alright, let's give this a zap.
Ok, that was too much zap, I left a little smudge of the electrodes in the weld. I guess on the bright side I didn't blow a hole straight through, so that's nice.
I think I got the timing worked out on the last weld. I really does only require just a tiny tickle on the switch to produce a solid weld on this gauge metal, despite the galvanization which can sometimes require a bit of extra energy to zap through.
And it is properly stuck together, I pried the sheets apart here and the metal just bent right at the weld nugget.
So that's another capability unlocked I guess!





















































