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Thread: Touch Panels on Welders.
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28th November 2013, 01:37 PM #1GOLD MEMBER
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Touch Panels on Welders.
Hi learned friends,
I am going to buy a new Tig welder, I have decided which one thanks to a thread from 2009, and it has options of older style Pots for varying the settings, or the new fangled Touch Panel. Call me old fashioned, but methinks the Pots are more reliable and easier to replace than the Touch Panel version. Any advice from users or repairers gladly accepted.
thanks,
Crocy.
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28th November 2013, 10:36 PM #2GOLD MEMBER
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Yep, I can see how it would be really easy to use a touch panel with welding gloves on. Where do they get these ideas from?
CHRIS
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29th November 2013, 07:53 AM #3
It actually works very well, my BOC/EWM Smootharc 230 TIG has a touch panel as did the Miller I used previously. Both are easy to set with the thin TIG gloves on. My thinking is that the touch panel should be reliable as the panel is sealed from dust unlike an analogue panel.
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29th November 2013, 10:10 AM #4GOLD MEMBER
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There are special gloves for TIG welding?
CHRIS
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29th November 2013, 10:52 AM #5
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29th November 2013, 01:09 PM #6GOLD MEMBER
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They are great for all that, except the pilot arc on my old Transtig 180 is a bit powerful and somedays goes through them. I am sure it just does it to remind me what electricty feels like
Gavin, thanks for the comment about the panel, I did not consider that aspect,
rgds,
Crocy.
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29th November 2013, 04:29 PM #7
From my experience the HF arc will go through any thickness glove or clothing. I've had it jump through my overalls when I'm sitting at my welding bench - that really hurts. My TIG does the same thing from time to time despite all the sophisticated electronics and computer control. Electricity will always find the path of least resistance.
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30th November 2013, 09:35 AM #8Philomath in training
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My TIG has membrane switches and a pot, so my thoughts on which is more usable are probably not strictly relevant.
However, I'd be worried about how susceptible the touch screen is to damage from all the accidental things in a welding area - showers of angle grinder sparks, hot ends of rods, spits of metal, the stuff on the shelf above finally paying attention to gravity and the list goes on*.
It will depend a bit on how you weld and where the unit is situated in relation to your work area.
Michael
*Yes, we all say that we don't work like this but it seems to happen anyway
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30th November 2013, 02:15 PM #9
True enough although I suspect that the panels are a lot tougher than might first seem the case (I certainly hope so given the amount I paid for the unit!). I have my TIG mounted on a trolley which I keep away from any grinding. When it's not in use it is kept covered up for protection. It's the same with the lathe, mill, surface plate etc, then they are not in use they have heavy, oiled, covers over them to protect them and to try and keep the dreaded rust at bay.
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