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Posted by Mark Rand on October 11, 2006, 12:19 pm
Please log in for more thread options On Wed, 11 Oct 2006 16:48:01 +0100, "Andrew Mawson"
>
>> On 11 Oct 2006 01:52:50 -0700, "david.sanderson@bem.fki-et.com"
>>
>>
>> >>From a quick poke at
>> >http://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Technical/Charts/VoltageDrop.html
>> >assuming your welder is 50V and 180A -> 9Kw power (might not be
>> >correct, but reasonable guess?) then for 40M run you should be
>using
>> >10mm sq cable, and that would give a 3% voltage drop. With 2.5mm
>you
>> >can probably only pull about 3Kw?
>> >
>> >
>> >
>>
>> It won't be 50V and 180A at the same time, the 50V is open-circuit,
>> the 180A is pretty much short-circuit. It might be as much as 6KW.
>>
>> >
>> >Try an old/cheap cooker hood, (possibly with charcoal filters). Not
>as
>> >effective aas a real welding extractor, but certainly an
>improvement. I
>> >use one for OA welding extraction (not as much smoke, but lots of
>> >soot...)
>> >
>> Sounds like a good idea.
>>
>> Tim
>>
>> Dutton Dry-Dock
>> Traditional & Modern canal craft repairs
>> Vintage diesel engine service
>
>Arc voltages when welding are remarkably constant at about 20-25 v
>
>AWEM
>
A significant point is that the voltage drop between the 50V or 80V open
circuit voltage and the 20-25V arc voltage occurs in the separate choke or
built in leakage reactance of the welder. so although it might only be pulling
3kW, it could well be pulling 9kVA. transformer Welders have _nasty_ power
factors.
Mark Rand
RTFM
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