If you were closer I would be tempted but I think even then I would have to refuse as I know once tried I would have to get oneYou are welcome to come and borrow one for the day.
Out of interest are there any pulse mig inverters in the 250amp range?It's called a demo where I'm from
Even with a light machine it gets tiresome having to reposition it every few minutes and that is where a spool gun comes into its own, bench work or on flat ground then normal torch is ok but clambering over a boat or hanging over the side and they are not so good. I have even found the one I have on the MTS to be a bit lacking, it is only 5m where my other one that I have on the Esab is 8m.Most certainly, I can't see the point of a spool gun on a pulse mig though. Doesn't that Phill Weeks Warrior mig have a 250 in the line up. Tech arc do too.
Do you have 3 phase? Options are limited on 230 volt.
Yes, they are extremely stable, great working platform for the creels (Lobster pots)She is a lovely stable thing. Barely looked like an effort on the twenty odd knot run.
Haha no, the hull is a Cheetah Marine.Did you do the hull Hood?
No kidding, looked immensely stable when they were pulling in the creels. My experience is on more "traditional" vessels - wooden clinker built affairsYes, they are extremely stable, great working platform for the creels (Lobster pots)
Haha no, the hull is a Cheetah Marine.
http://www.cheetahmarine.co.uk/en/about
Spent many years myself as a Fisherman and was always on displacement hull boats of varying sizes and all rolled. The Cats are in a different league but the different motion takes a bit of getting used to Went out on the Sea Trials of the second Cat I fitted out and was weird, was a poor day and found it funny, kind of dropped into the waves if side on rather than rolling about like a barrel
Not many will to be fair (lifeboats and specially designed craft excepted).Cats won't self right either, if they roll over, they tend to stay rolled.