Pickhill Bantam Oil Welder Manual

Welder

Manufacturer: Pickhill. Model: Bantam Oil Cooled Stick Welder High & Low Volt Settings: High 10: 30 amp – 120 amp Low 6: 65 amp – 180 amp. Power: Single or Three Phase Electrics. 240v Olympic bantam oil cooled Stick welder. Collection in person. 180 amp oil cooled stick welder. Collection in person. Swift Oil Filled Arc Welder On Wheels. Oxford Oil Cooled Welder 360amp. Collection in person. This is my new to me Pickhill bantam welder. This replaces my other welder which is inmy older videos. The reassembly of the oil filled Oxford arc welder. In the final part (part 4) the question of smoke, flame, fire or sparks gets answered. Problem with old-syle oil-imersed arc welder Showing 1-40 of 40 messages. Problem with old-syle oil-imersed arc welder: orion.@virgin.net: 7/16/13 10:19 AM: Hi all, I think the arc welder I have may be faulty. It's an old Olympic one from the early 80s and looks indistinguishable from an Oxford of the same vintage and amperage.

Pickhill Bantam Oil Welder Manual Briggs And Stratton

OK, I found the problem.
I used a mobile crane to lift off the lid. *All* the electro-mechanical contents are bolted to the underside of the lid on this model, so you can actually remove the complete workings from their oil bath with no difficulty (assuming you have some means of handling the weight involved).
The fault was immediately apparent. This type of welder has course and fine amperage adjustments as detailed elsewhere in this thread. The contacts of the course adjustment were virtually mint in their almost Victorian splendor. The fault was with the fine adjustment. Both adjustments rely on exactly the same system: transformer tappings determined by the movement of pointers described elsewhere on this thread. On the business end of the pointers' shafts down below the oil level, there's a contact in the form of a copper blade about 2mm thick which engages between the slot of a four-way range of springy copper receptacles. On the fine adjustment described, there is unmistakable evidence of heavy arching and charring during previous operation which to fix up goes beyond what a mere clean-up and re-profile would achieve.
I want to rescue this beast. There's nothing like an oil-cooled arc welder for tackling the real heavy jobs and despite their weight, you just can't beat 'em. So the question now is.... - please take note those here that dip into threads without reading the background first - .... where in the UK can I get oil-cooled arc welder spares, or if not that, then 1mm and 2mm thick copper sheet I can trim, bend and fit myself?
cheers.