
I am hoping someone on the forum owns an arc welder or something and can pick one for me from this website.
Thanks!
But would it be to the full potential as a 100-200$ arc welder, and won't I lose a ball or something from the Microwaves?rcman50166 wrote:How's under $50 dollars sound? Just make your own. It's quite simple really. To make the welder itself you just need two microwaves. A little modifying to the components and you get an arc welder.
And some instructions.
http://www.instructables.com/id/Build-a ... de-Welder/
lol they're extremely dangerous but the component that creates them (the magnetron) would never be used in this case.Counterstriker wrote:I think I'll buy one, Aren't microwaves (not the appliance, the "waves") dangerous?
I take pride in things I make also, just not things that could fry my testicles.rcman50166 wrote:lol they're extremely dangerous but the component that creates them (the magnetron) would never be used in this case.Counterstriker wrote:I think I'll buy one, Aren't microwaves (not the appliance, the "waves") dangerous?
BTW maybe your different, but I take pride in things that I make instead of buy because it seperates me from the consumer sheep of this world. (not that I'm calling you one, unless you have an Ipod. In that case, I say to you: BaHHH!)
L...O...freakin...LCounterstriker wrote:I take pride in things I make also, just not things that could fry my testicles.rcman50166 wrote:lol they're extremely dangerous but the component that creates them (the magnetron) would never be used in this case.Counterstriker wrote:I think I'll buy one, Aren't microwaves (not the appliance, the "waves") dangerous?
BTW maybe your different, but I take pride in things that I make instead of buy because it seperates me from the consumer sheep of this world. (not that I'm calling you one, unless you have an Ipod. In that case, I say to you: BaHHH!)
Many years ago, I thought I could "seperate from the sheep" by building my own power amplifiers and other stereo gear. I actually did some of that, designed from the ground up, the stuff sounded awesome and was a great experience. However, I ended up spending 3 times what I would have on commercial gear, plus an astounding amount of time was invested in construction and testing...and it never did look quite as good as commercial gear....I finally just abandoned the stuff and moved on.rcman50166 wrote: BTW maybe your different, but I take pride in things that I make instead of buy because it seperates me from the consumer sheep of this world. (not that I'm calling you one, unless you have an Ipod. In that case, I say to you: BaHHH!)