THE BIRTH OF PULSED BOVINE FECAL MATTER
AT MILLER. In the nineteen eighties, the largest technical college in Vancouver Canada purchased Miller's first pulsed MIG power source, the Miller PulsedStar. This pulsed equipment cost 400% more than a traditional CV. MIG power source.
The technical college was exited about it's investment in new weld technology. For many weeks the instructors at the college tried to get the Miller pulsed power source to produce a vertical up fillet weld with an 045 MIG steel wire on a 6 mm steel plate. As the weld process control training manger for Linde, Western Canada, I was considered by a few as an expert on the MIG process. The college asked if I would visit and see what I could do with their costly MIG package. I set that Miller power source at every possible wire feed and pulsed frequency combination possible. The PulseStar simply could not provide a suitable wire feed / parameter combination for welding vert up and the pulsed welds made in the flat and horizontal weld positions were inferior to a much lower cost CV power source.
After the PulseStar came the pulsed Miller Maxtron and that excuse for an unstable MIG power source does not deserve one line in this web site. One thing you can say about Miller is they don't give up.
After the Miller Maxtron they provided the pulsed Invision which went through more E Prom changes than I have had pints of Guinness. Finally the Miller Accupulse. If you are using this equipment on a robot, using pulsed and the adaptive arc mode you may be getting arc instability, arc ignition issues, arc outage or wire burn back issues to the contact tips. Many of the pulsed adaptive arc issues that Miller is having today were on their their pulsed equipment made a decade earlier.
Watch out for the next new pulsed power source within 24 months after the introduction of the Accupulse. I guess some one in marketing at MIller thinks the best way to get rid of their numerous, pulsed electronic issues is to place the power source in a new blue box and give it a new blue name
During the last decade, MIG power source manufactures have found a home for electronic chips and printed boards. These companies quickly found out that with "electronics", they could triple the cost of their MIG equipment.
You can pay $2000 or $12000 for a MIG powere souce and on steel welds you wont attain a benefit from the $12000 power source. The high cost of electronic MIG equipment today strikes me as strange, as the implementation of electronics into most other manufacturing products has typically ended up lowering the cost of the product.
UNNECESSARY MIG POWER SOURCE COMPLEXITY. Panasonic proudly informs the welding public. "To cover all weld application possibilities, our Panasonic MIG equipment has a data base of "four million patterns" of various weld wave forms". It's ironic that in a decade, I have yet to see one of their MIG power sources out perform the traditional lower cost, more rugged CV, MIG equipment on a steel weld. By the way every MIG weld application in the world only requires 4 weld settings, I dont know what Panasonic needs with the other 3,999,997 wave forms.
taken from- http://www.weldreality.com/flux_cored_pipe_welding.htm