What I mean is, when the trigger is pressed to start a run of weld,
there is a cold humpy bit at the start which disappears as the weld
heats up.
Some welders seem to do a much better job and there is very little difference
at the start compared to the rest of the weld.
So how is this achieved.
I had a Cebora 300 amp single phase that was very good in this respect,
it started off much like a tig nice soft no spark worth and hummed away through
the weld, not sizzled like most of us tend to hear.
I had a smaller Cebora brother for it, and it was like a tig too, butter smooth welds
like tig, spatter was a real oddity with this welder set to basically spray.
So, is there anything we can to to our welders to get better starts, like upslope,
would adding an arduino a few pots set to bring up a higher voltage and wire setting
when the trigger is pressed help, the circuit would then cut to what ever parameters
you have set for the weld.
there is a cold humpy bit at the start which disappears as the weld
heats up.
Some welders seem to do a much better job and there is very little difference
at the start compared to the rest of the weld.
So how is this achieved.
I had a Cebora 300 amp single phase that was very good in this respect,
it started off much like a tig nice soft no spark worth and hummed away through
the weld, not sizzled like most of us tend to hear.
I had a smaller Cebora brother for it, and it was like a tig too, butter smooth welds
like tig, spatter was a real oddity with this welder set to basically spray.
So, is there anything we can to to our welders to get better starts, like upslope,
would adding an arduino a few pots set to bring up a higher voltage and wire setting
when the trigger is pressed help, the circuit would then cut to what ever parameters
you have set for the weld.