Or fit the T and the sole flowmeter -- providing you're not lugging the cylinder about much with the guages attached (strictly a bad idea, anyway) -- it'll be fine.
I'd have to pull out my books and think about it, but I'm pretty sure that in cars it's the other way round.
On a bike I'd worry about debris from the gearbox rather than the clutch.
I'd be almost as worried about degreaser residue contaminating my oil, even so, I doubt that it would...
On some (but by no means all) single phase motors there will be instructions on how to reverse the motor on the back of the wee cover where the wires enter the motor. Worth a look. I'd guess that a drill press motor is unlikely to be cap start, and that the stuff in the box is some kind of...
I think that's right.
Dunno what the history of the car that had the oil cooler was, but wise people don't use second hand oil coolers: you never know what they have in them and they're impossible to clean inside properly.
That doesn't apply to most aftermarket water/oil coolers.
Are we talking MIG or TIG?
On TIG I set the post flow to something fairly long, hit the button, adjust the flow to what I want, re-trim the post flow.
For MIG I've always used the Woz method.
For what it is, it does seem you're paying a premium for buying locally, especially as the guy says he'll have to send it back to the main dealer for repairs.
I know absolutely nothing about that particular machine. Does seem pricey for a straight stick inverter -- you should be able to buy...
Absolutely. But I can't see any other way of doing it, physically.
HasBean, Titanium is incredibly reactive, so one approach is to run argon to the torch, argon as a back purge (just as with stainless) and a trailing arm device attached to the torch to purge the weld as it cools. Something...
It should be nice, easy to weld steel. So far (I've yet to section one to see how thick they are) I've thought of a stand for a grinder (the column, at least) while the end peices could be used for height adjustable stands (similar to those used for keyboards).
A pump up air reservoir (for...
I think the cheaper Wolf ones are live torch. If you get yourself an auto mask and can get out of the habit of resting the wire on the workpeice you should get on fine.
Possibly -- but I doubt you'll need 250amps. To get the disposable bottles to work you need a disposable regulator (these take a 4mm pipe) and a small bottle to big bottle MIG adaptor. You're just using it back to front, as it were.
Weldequip, if you PM him, tell him what you're doing...
Local fab and engineering shops will probably let you have stuff very cheap, if not free. Sometimes metal merchants will have stuff that's so 'orrible they'll let you take it.
Ask, and you may be given........... ;)