Well, after a couple of years of good service from my Harbor Freight 170 amp welder it decided to play up. I had just finished welding some 3/8 inch angle to a heaver section of plate and all was well. I then started to tack weld some grate sections and the power went down. It is still welding but is now low on power.
I have taken it apart and it is an AC to DC unit, the bridge regulator seems to be OK, I check all the diodes - although they were still connected to the inputs and they all showed at .54 which is within spec, they show open when reversed. The unit has 20 volts DC on the output. It has 8 diodes and I have read that this is the most likely issue.
Am I missing something in the testing, should the diodes be disconnected from each other and the drop in power only related to diode issues?
I have been looking at these single bridge diodes 200 amp, think that is overkill but no marking exist on the diodes I can see, it would appear that the 180 amp version has 16 diodes and the 170 amp 8, I believe that affects the duty cycle. What are your thoughts?
It says single phase bridge regulator.
Anything you can suggest would be greatly appreciated.
I have taken it apart and it is an AC to DC unit, the bridge regulator seems to be OK, I check all the diodes - although they were still connected to the inputs and they all showed at .54 which is within spec, they show open when reversed. The unit has 20 volts DC on the output. It has 8 diodes and I have read that this is the most likely issue.
Am I missing something in the testing, should the diodes be disconnected from each other and the drop in power only related to diode issues?
I have been looking at these single bridge diodes 200 amp, think that is overkill but no marking exist on the diodes I can see, it would appear that the 180 amp version has 16 diodes and the 170 amp 8, I believe that affects the duty cycle. What are your thoughts?
It says single phase bridge regulator.
Anything you can suggest would be greatly appreciated.