Keith,
Sounds like good advice. I've been considering an oxy/acetylene setup
too,
but had been thinking more in terms of a Port-A-Torch because they're
fairly
inexpensive and portable. I don't anticipate a lot of use and I don't
have the
room in my garage to store a setup that includes a couple of large heavy
tanks.
What do you suggest looking for, or more precisely what to avoid,
especially if
it's something that might need refurbishing? And what do you mean by
cheap.
Can the tanks be rented/leased and if so, does that make sense?
Also the Q-size tanks sound like a good compromise. What do you think?
Roland
On Thu, 17 Jul 2003 14:00:18 -0500 "Keith Turk" <kturk@ala.net> writes:
>
> Money and Tools.... Hmmm now well those two go together defies
> description
> doesn't it....
>
> Anyway.... I've always been of the opinion that I'd rather have High
> quality
> Used tools everytime over low quality new junk.... ( Snap on level
> stuff...
> or in this case Victor ) To find these I've simply browsed my local
> pawn
> shops and since Welding sets aren't used very much they are Often
> pawned...
> and CHEAP....
>
> My welding supply was more then happy to refurbish my torches for
> 20
> bucks... and set me up with bottles... so there you go.... a cheap
> but
> quality way out...
>
> Keith
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "David Scheidt" <dmschei@attglobal.net>
> To: "Matt Wehland" <mattw@webtripper.com>
> Cc: <shop-talk@autox.team.net>
> Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2003 12:53 PM
> Subject: Re: Oxy Acetylene Torches
>
>
> >
> > >So does any one have any experience with these sets?
> >
> > I've used cheap torch sets of several different brands, and
> they've
> > been cheap for a reason. They tend to have shitty regulators,
> valves
> > that don't stay adjusted right, low-quality hoses and such.
> There
> > may well be brands that are better than others, but I wouldn't
> buy
> > one without being able to test it first. A kit from Harris,
> Smith,
> > victor or the like doesn't cost a whole lot more, and is much
> nicer
> > in quality.
> > Don't start with a set of small bottles. The little 20 cu ft
> things
> > don't last very long, and cost nearly as much to fill as larger
> ones.
> > I'd go for Q-sized (80 cu ft, about 3' high) as a minimum.
> >
> >
> >
> > David
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