Share
Results 1 to 20 of 20

Thread: Newbie with 200DX

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. Default Newbie with 200DX

    Hi All,

    New guy here with no tig experience. I was able to pickup the 200DX few days ago and I am pretty happy with my ventures to tig welding. Being from Toronto I drove directly to the warehouse in Burlington to test/pickup the unit.

    Here are some pictures from day 1 to day 2 with about 1hr of figuring out what to do. Yes i did watch the videos from weldingtipsandtrick and I can say Thanks for all those tutorials that help people like myself and probably someone with more experience than a newbie.



    day one - pulse off, 100 amp, freq and balance set like the pic above.



    day 2 - more practice with same settings on upper right corner
    lower right corner and left column - pulse on... im loving the pulse it helps me to get the rhythm on when to dip the rod



    I am welding on a 1/8th tick alum plate with pulse set to 80 low and 130 high. Any recommendations on the amp for no pulse and with pulse? I notice that the plate is starting to warp. I am using 3/32 rods but do have some 1/16 rods to practice with.

    Cheers!
    Ryan
    Last edited by kpsxtyone; 05-06-2011 at 02:56 PM.

  2. #2

    Default

    Turn your AC balance fully left. Too much cleaning. 30% on this is all you need.

    Pulse is really an average of amps, but the math gets complicated when things get skewed. A slow pulse setting is best for timing dips, at the minimum settings. Amps are also dependent on your pulse time on. a 50% setting is a good starting point and easiest to manage, providing a balanced time on and off. Lower the amps to 110, and 60 and post your results, other than that things look quite decent.

  3. #3

    Default

    If you turn the AC balance all the way to the left, will the ecthing go away 100%


    I found that 1/16 filler is just too small, for us rookies. I had to turn the AC freq all the way up to tighten up the spread and still had trouble keeping the puddle small enough that the 1/16 just dipping was enought to get the ripples. I plan to stay with 3/32 for a while till I get a better handle in aluminum
    sold my miller mig
    got a PT250EX
    saving up for a plasma cutter

  4. Default

    Thanks for the comments.. btw no worries about thread hijack its more than welcome so we can all help each other.

    I was using 3/16 tungsten with red band. I will have to redo the way i sharpen the tungsten and post some results. I will try to make a video clip

  5. Default

    made the changes as per Marks suggestion

    settings
    I am not sure if half way is 50% for the pulse time on. What is the benefit of the Pulse Freq?


    result - lower left
    - noticed a narrower path (maybe due to lower amp setting 60 low / 110 high)
    - dipping the rod was more manageable than original setting



  6. #6

    Default

    I don't see much difference in the width of the etching.
    Tony
    Everlast PowerPro 256
    AC225 "Tombstone"
    HF 20 ton press
    Rotary 9000# two-post

  7. #7

    Default

    There is no display of the amps when you use the foot pedal. The dial on the foot pedal itself controls the welding amps. Half way on the foot dial is approximately half of the amps (100 amps).

    I experimented with mine by setting the foot dial and holding a constant arc length and watching the display when pressing the foot pedal (actually starting an arc and maxing out the pedal while watching the machine display, not the arc...)

    John
    Everlast 200DX
    Everlast PT185
    Shoptask 3-in-1 (not currently in my garage, but I own it...)

    Any day on a motorcycle like this that ends just needing parts and labor is a good day.
    4.82, 158.67mph 1/8th mile 7.350, 200.35mph 1/4 mile

  8. #8

    Default

    I guess the 200DX and 250EX are not the same display. While doing some video tests I was able to watch the display as I worked the petal, and it looks like it does display the changing amps, but in up slope and down slope it does go -130 then if the slope is long enough it will disply the right amps.

    If when you plug in the foot petal I am pretty sure you need to make sure the rocker switch is in the 2t position. Then the main amp dial will set the max amps when the foot petal is floored. If yours is stuck at 15, I would give support a call or email
    sold my miller mig
    got a PT250EX
    saving up for a plasma cutter

  9. #9

    Default

    The 200DX will reflect actual amps when the unit is welding. Otherwise you might be confused by seeing a negative number. The rheostat on the foot pedal controls the current on the DX.

  10. Default

    how are you able to set amps when using the foot pedal? When i plug in the pedal it just stays at 15 amps even if i crank up the main dial.

  11. Default

    i turned the ac balance all the way left to -30 and no difference in etching. I was hoping it to be almost as small as the bead.

    Is there something wrong here?

  12. #12

    Default

    A possibility is an issue with the speed you are welding. You really shouldn't try to learn with pulse. You should be learning to master regular steel first, then aluminum and the start to figure in pulse. If you are welding too slow, a wide cleaning area can be observed. When you adjust the AC balance, what clock position do you start getting good balling? What tungsten are you using? What gas flow rate according to the gauge on the EVERLAST Argon meter?
    Last edited by performance; 05-08-2011 at 03:18 AM.

  13. #13

    Default

    I didnt want to hijack the thread, but I also have/had the same problem....and from what little I have learned so far it looks you might have too long of an arc - the welding tricks ant tips guy said the thickness of the tungsten is a good rule of thumb for your arc length. Plus some of my first aluminum welds looks just like yours, wide and lots of ecthing. I had to turn the AC freq all the way up to get a narrower bead. After talking with Mark he suggested that I tighten up the arc length, ans sure enugth I was able to set the AC freq back to noon and get a narrower bead and well and slim down the ecthing.

    I am running a 3/32 thoriated tungsten, and 10cfh of argon with a number 6 cup.
    Here is the tungsten at the start


    All 4 test were run AC freq set and noon, 90amps but using the foot pedal floored to start and then backing it down to 3/4 once the puddle gets going
    Bead A has the AC Bal set all the way to the left
    Bead B had it set to 9oclock
    Had a bad start for bead C and got the tungsten too close, then put in another tungsten and ran bead C with the AC Bal at noon. After the down slope I noticed some somke from the tungsten, so I bumped up the post flow from 8oclock to 11oclock
    Bead D I set the AC Bal to 1oclock and in my test run it balled up, so bead D started with the balled up tungsten. Not sure how people welded like that in the past because the arc really wanted to wander, unless I floored the petal.


    And the tungsten after the bead from D
    Last edited by dgarnier; 05-08-2011 at 07:13 PM.
    sold my miller mig
    got a PT250EX
    saving up for a plasma cutter

  14. #14

    Default

    dgarnier,
    You will get even better results if you sharpen the tungsten back a little more.

  15. #15

    Default

    To more of a point? or give it a longer taper?
    sold my miller mig
    got a PT250EX
    saving up for a plasma cutter

Similar Threads

  1. Newbie with a Tig
    By slanwar in forum General Welding Questions
    Replies: 7
    Last Post: 02-12-2018, 12:10 AM
  2. Newbie from SW Virginia
    By dsmabe in forum Introduce Yourself
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 07-21-2014, 02:28 PM
  3. Buy the Powertig 200dx or save for The Dynasty 200dx
    By AfroPaul in forum TIG Welding (GTAW/GTAW-P)
    Replies: 40
    Last Post: 05-13-2013, 08:18 PM
  4. Old Newbie
    By Lone Wolf in forum Introduce Yourself
    Replies: 9
    Last Post: 01-08-2012, 09:25 PM
  5. Newbie with a Power TIG 200DX
    By Aspen in forum TIG Welding (GTAW/GTAW-P)
    Replies: 19
    Last Post: 03-30-2010, 06:59 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •