New rubber on the 1290R. Replaced the oem AX41woth a Motoz Adventure. First bike I ever killed a rear tire on in 3000kms
New rubber on the 1290R. Replaced the oem AX41woth a Motoz Adventure. First bike I ever killed a rear tire on in 3000kms
Yup. Supposedly super strong so should be pretty puncture resistant.Looks the business. Tubeless?
Good advice, but starting with TIG is expensive and not so easy.Welder advice: No matter what you buy, you regret not buying a bigger/better one.
... that means there are always lots of great deals on used welders
... and if you plan on welding motorcycle stuff, get a TIG
... and not to a welder snob, but buy name brand, that way when the thing breaks down you can get parts... and new welders gots more bells and whistles than new cars. I learned on a welder with 3 settings: amperage, on, off. My current TIG looks like a jet cockpit
They will pop a 15A breaker after about a minute on high. Most welding is on and off the trigger, if you're running 30% duty cycle in a 2 minute period -- I doubt you'll pop a breaker.Does yours use a regular 15A plug? I've only got 15A circuits in the garage to work with, and I wasn't clear if the larger units require a 20A circuit (eg: the cheapo PowerFist fluxcore machine has a max amperage draw of 23A. Even the mini stick machine has a max draw of 20A, but has a 15A plug on it).
edit: the manuals for both of these say they require a 20A circuit, despite the 15A plug on the little one.
Is a flux core machine easier to use or significantly better at some things than stick? Skill-wise, I'm guessing the main difference is just figuring out the wire feed rate?
Cheaper to aim an air conditioning duct at your breaker panel than it is to upgrade wiring.They will pop a 15A breaker after about a minute on high. Most welding is on and off the trigger, if you're running 30% duty cycle in a 2 minute period -- I doubt you'll pop a breaker.
True, but for us motorcycle folks, TIG is infinitely more useful.but starting with TIG is expensive and not so easy
Hard to say what’s more useful. I’d sharpen up my TIG if I was doing metal finish work, building tanks or repairing cases, but for fabricating or repairing steel stuff, I like the ease, versatility, speed of MIG (TIG is sloooow).True, but for us motorcycle folks, TIG is infinitely more useful.
Not easy? nothing is easy. It is "easier" to bodge two steel plates together with a MIG than a TIG, but it's not welding.
I've got a pulse AC/DC... and using pulse on steel feels like cheating... it's comparatively EASY (I grew up gas welding, so TIG came kinda natural. I can't stick or MIG to save my life. But the day I brought home my current machine, I welded two razor blades together (nice bead if I say do so myself, IIRC about 12v/ 2A) cuz that's what one does, and that was before I figured out you could use pulse on steel)
Stickin two pieces of steel together is "easier" with a MIG, learning how to weld them together is much steeper curve, no matter what process. TIG has a gas pedal, MIG doesn't (gas pedal like in your car, to make it faster or slower, not an argon gas pedal)
And there's no el'cheapo MIGs with a 30% duty cycle, more like 5 -10%, so no more than 6 minutes an hour, with lots of time to cool, or you blow fuses... glorified spot welders. A 30% welder is not going to be cheap.
I like it. Thanks for the reminder; I need to sharpen and wax my skis. I usually do that after the season and then just scrape them in the fall but just didn't get around to it this year.Sharpened some more skiis. All skiis are now ready and on the wall.
I got a bunch done in the spring but not all. Temps climbed and tuning skiis in a hot garage is not fun. Like you, I try to get them done in the spring to protect them and then scrape them just before using them. Picked up a few more sets for the kids cheap as one kid didn't like the larger skiis I bought them. I think they were great and the kid is good enough for them but lacks the confidence to push and really lean on them so the slalom skiis just ended up being heavy and scary. The replacement skiis are much lighter and lazier (and twin-tips).I like it. Thanks for the reminder; I need to sharpen and wax my skis. I usually do that after the season and then just scrape them in the fall but just didn't get around to it this year.
True, but for us motorcycle folks, TIG is infinitely more useful.
Not easy? nothing is easy. It is "easier" to bodge two steel plates together with a MIG than a TIG, but it's not welding.
I've got a pulse AC/DC... and using pulse on steel feels like cheating... it's comparatively EASY (I grew up gas welding, so TIG came kinda natural. I can't stick or MIG to save my life. But the day I brought home my current machine, I welded two razor blades together (nice bead if I say do so myself, IIRC about 12v/ 2A) cuz that's what one does, and that was before I figured out you could use pulse on steel)
Stickin two pieces of steel together is "easier" with a MIG, learning how to weld them together is much steeper curve, no matter what process. TIG has a gas pedal, MIG doesn't (gas pedal like in your car, to make it faster or slower, not an argon gas pedal)
And there's no el'cheapo MIGs with a 30% duty cycle, more like 5 -10%, so no more than 6 minutes an hour, with lots of time to cool, or you blow fuses... glorified spot welders. A 30% welder is not going to be cheap.
Bleeping kickstarter. It is interesting (but risky) to support a person/team with an idea but no capital. Functional businesses that run products through kickstarter I basically ignore. Such a dodgy way of doing business with so many broken promises without consequences.I've been looking at the YesWelder MIG205 and can't seem to find a single bad review. They just came out with a new model with dual pulse. What do you think?
What is this "pulse" feature?I've been looking at the YesWelder MIG205 and can't seem to find a single bad review. They just came out with a new model with dual pulse. What do you think?
Flux core wire is sensitive to the drive roll tension, I’ve found that too much tension distorts the hollow wire which makes some brands fart and pop, particularly .035.Gotta chime in on the welding. I have a cheap CTC flux core machine and it's GREAT! It been invaluable on my latest project. I've said it before, the power to join metal is near magical.
HOWEVER, I needed more wire so I grabbed two 2lb rolls of Powerweld that was on sale at PA for $16 each. When I couldn't lay a bead I thought the popping and farting was something in my substrate (like trying to weld galvanized).
Went out and dropped 24$ on a one LB roll of Lincoln Innershield and BINGO! I'm a welder again.
This is actually a long-established business in the entry level market, but for some reason they launch new models through Kickstarter offering early adopters half price. I assume it's to gauarantee commitment so that they can invest in quantity to reduce their manufacturing cost, which they then turn around and pass on to the consumer.Bleeping kickstarter. It is interesting (but risky) to support a person/team with an idea but no capital. Functional businesses that run products through kickstarter I basically ignore. Such a dodgy way of doing business with so many broken promises without consequences.