While I haven't welded with a gas torch in a very long time due to my patio also being my workshop, the flow meter is almost always an accompaniment to an oxy-gas rig here in the US. I know a lot of guys run them to help meter out their tig rigs, too, so you'll see all three working together for those deep-of-pocket dudes. Me being at the mercy of mother nature, I will run C02 when I can but most of the time I do a lot of flux-cored stuff. My big project two years ago ended up gobbling up 6 kilos of stainless steel flux cored wire and was the mother of all learning curves for me. Very interesting stuff, not particularly cheap, but necessary for building jet engines. 😁
Hello Peter, I have a normal pressure reducer (regulator) on the Mag welding device. I use the flow meter on the Tig welding device. Greetings from Lahr Germany
While I haven't welded with a gas torch in a very long time due to my patio also being my workshop, the flow meter is almost always an accompaniment to an oxy-gas rig here in the US. I know a lot of guys run them to help meter out their tig rigs, too, so you'll see all three working together for those deep-of-pocket dudes.
Me being at the mercy of mother nature, I will run C02 when I can but most of the time I do a lot of flux-cored stuff. My big project two years ago ended up gobbling up 6 kilos of stainless steel flux cored wire and was the mother of all learning curves for me. Very interesting stuff, not particularly cheap, but necessary for building jet engines. 😁
Wow mate that's sounds very interesting .
Hello Peter, I have a normal pressure reducer (regulator) on the Mag welding device. I use the flow meter on the Tig welding device. Greetings from Lahr Germany
Cheers Marko .
I really should get a flowmeter for mine and see how it works out- as you said- the gauges aren't the best to get the right flow going...
yea you can see exactly what gas your useing.
Hi pete
Hi my friend