First off, I'd like to make it clear I'm very happy with my welder and I would still recommend it to anyone who wants an outrageous bargain. If and when I have an excuse to buy another Everlast welder, I will.
So I was welding today and suddenly blew a hole through what I was working on.
I looked at the welder at it was at 257A. I had it set to 119A.
I tried flipping all the switches and messing around with stuff. The display stays at 257A no matter where I move the AMPS knob, except maybe the first 1/16th of a turn where it will go down to 240A. This is in TIG, PLASMA, and STICK modes.
I had a similar if not identical problem a few years ago and Ray at tech support sent me some parts and I was able to fix it following his instructions. So hopefully its that easy this time.
I called up Ray and he says that the display should be showing more like 400+A if the same chip that died a few years ago died again. Hrmm. I could swear that its doing the same thing it was a couple years ago.
The chip in question is the MC14053BCP on one of the daughter boards, and I believe the rework he had me do before (at my request) was replacing that chip with a socket and a new chip, adding a bypass cap to a resistor nearby, and replacing two diodes. I am an EE so soldering and troubleshooting is easier and quicker for me than packing up the welder and shipping it around. Technically its still under warranty right now, but if I can just replace a couple parts again that would be very preferable because I'm right in the middle of a project.
I just bought 4 MC14053BCP chips on ebay for about 6 bucks. I'm hoping this is the issue. I emailed Ray the control board number and hopefully he may have a few ideas about what I might be able to check to identify the problem if its not this.
Does anyone who has done a 4053 replacement remember the symptoms they had when it died? Did the current stick at full machine rated current or did it go way up to like 400A?