To learn electronics in a very different and effective way, and gain access to Mr Carlson's personal designs and inventions, visit the Mr Carlson's Lab Patreon page here: www.patreon.com/MrCarlsonsLab
I joined as a member on Oct. 1, 2024. I can't see how to access member benefits. I paid PayPal and it is completed. Where do I go to get access to benefits? All the other videos except free are locked. I joined at 9$ level. I am confused how it works. It says I am a 'free' member, not 'paid.'
Here comes the Mr PhotonicInduction's Lab! Nice old welder. I'm sure it weighs close to 100kg. Here in Europe you could be 100% certain that a big unit like this would be powered from 3-phase supply.
Love You Keri! I actualy have the ignitrons from an old radiator welder which would fit something like this for an old scool DC convertion... ha ha . (I wanted to give them Rons collection ower there but it fell on the shipping cost at the moment).
I worked once for a auto repair shop that was based out of a very large and old dealership in Baltimore Maryland. I think it was built sometime in the '30s or earlier. You could actually see in the basement different construction styles as they add it on throughout pre-war and postwar. At one point they must have been repairing very large trucks because there were at least three or four welders hardwired into the electrical system. Stick welders that were on wheels 3 ft tall and approximately 3 ft in diameter. The cable itself that went to the wall was easily 2 in diameter. Never had bravery to fire one of them up! For all I know there's still hardwired there
Glad this old boy still works just fine. Got the coffee machine ready for the next video, can't wait to get the notification, Paul 😊..much love from Germany ❤..
The thumbnail with you giving thumbs up on 250 Amps will it work was epic. It said yes it will work, but had the comedic effect of "well, a guess and a prayer will do it." At least for new people who don't know you yet.
Welder here! Of course I immediately had to look and the information plate on the front to see what was going on by the numbers, and saw a duty cycle of 30% @ 250 amps, interesting old machine! For those that don't know, duty cycle indicates the percentage of time that the machine is running where that indicated power is actually available before the machine becomes too hot and has to cool down. So, to put it into context of the span of 10 minutes, you could only weld at 250 amps for 3 minutes out of 10. As you decrease your power draw, the duty cycle increases and at some point becomes 100%, though I do not remember if that graphs as a curve or linear.
Is Paul trying to rival WRMI in output power??? I curiously await the next video. Just try not to pull a Photonicinduction and trip out your local substation 😉
I remember working as a welder/burner at the shipyards in Thunder Bay in the 1970s. The arc welders were massive units each about the size of 4 fridges and the cables had to be "very" long to reach into areas of the 1,000 ft (read 320 meter) lake boats (read grain and iron ore carriers). The entire boat was grounded. So, not standing in puddles (very often) but standing on grounded steel all the time. In February when it snowed and was -30 Fahrenheit you would use a torch to heat up the steel you had to lay/sit on to do the welding. These big welders were smooth like butter. One time my welding gloves got a bit wet while moving some snow aside. I then grabbed a new rod and put it into the holder which of course was live. Not very pleasant but definitely didn't feel life threatening at the time. The amperage setting was around 80 amps but I would guess the voltage on the rod to the grounded ship to be around 80-90 since it did feel pretty close to holding on to wires from a 120VAC house breaker. (which I have grabbed many times and am none the worse for wear.) The real danger is the 240VAC supply. I touched that "once" on the back of a dryer while changing a light bulb and that is incredibly painful and dangerous. Of course Carlson's advice is worth listening to - don't stand in a puddle and touch the "stinger". lol
In my years in the US military we had AC to DC rectifiers that were about the same size as yours. It had terminals on the front to strap it for 12 or 24 volts. It was used to power vehicular radios in stationary settings. They all had tubes, vibrators and dynamotors. At least 100 pounds. Took 2 men to move it. Thanks.
I love the metal work on old stuff like that. Like on the cord exit. Ooof, yeah, welding gloves better not be damp. I think my Sencore LC meter starts flashing a warning light over 25V. LOL!
Now I'm wondering what the heck is Paul going to power up with it? It is a "noisy" AC constant current transformer. For electronics it may need a really big rectifier, a really big one with a heatsink to match! I guess we will find out. I can't wait! Maybe he will finally get a Mad Scientist award from it.
You aren't truly a "Mad Scientist", until your experiments like Tesla, take so much power away from the nearby city Colorado Springs in his case, that you cause it to black out ( denvergazette website has an article with a quote "And in 1899, he sent a lighting bolt more than 100 feet into the air accompanied by a thunderous boom heard up to 20 miles away. The city’s electrical equipment caught fire and Colorado Springs went dark".. This is just "Over-exuberant tinkerer" level compared to that!
Yeah that "high" reading sounds familiar - I think my old Lincoln tombstone measured 48 volts on it's high setting (no load). I don't recall the low setting.
What a beast! When I was a kid,my Dad gifted me a 5vdc power supply...after some testing we figured out it current limited at 100 A. I made a right, proper electrolyzer out of it by turning the output voltage down to 2.5V, and i current limited it to 50A...which it more than happily supplied. I had great fun making hydrogen gas to fill balloons...or hydrogen and oxygen for some epic bangs. I once filled up an old, empty 10 gallon aquarium with chlorine gas just for fun. (Chlorine gas is evil: do not mess with it!)
hate to let you down mR C, but i can't figure out a broken mr sharpy pencil sharpener that won't work. it's from the 80's or there about. I've watched many of your videos. and electronics just does not click with me. but love all yours. great stuff. i hope you are building a 14000 watt CB amp lol..
on all my welders, I use the 50/30 amp plug and leave the neutral blade out since they don't use the neutral. that way I can plug them into any 3 wire 4 pin 30 or 50 amp receptacle, since the neutral blade it what makes them different. at least anything newer wired that has a 30amp dryer or 50 amp oven receptacle, beyond that temporary breaker and pigtail. (NEMA 14-50R or 14-30R)
I can't want Mr Carlson. I'm so happy you're back with new projects and regular uploads. Cheers from Poland! You're awesome and I wish you your day to have 48h! The amount of work you do and we can't see it's probably monstrous! You're the definition of passion, knowledge and ability to share those two. Have a amazing day Mr Carlson! 🫡
What a beast, reminds me of my welding training at school in 1993. We also had such ancient AC welding machines there. The welding stations were next to each other, separated by a small wall to block the light from the person next to you. One day we were welding with 4mm² electrodes, so the welding machines were set to very high amperage (think around 180A), and the teacher was away for a moment. We started hitting the electrodes of 2 welding machines against each other like the lightsabers in Star Wars. Little did we know, that all the welding machines were connected to each other via the welding tables. The moment the coating of the electrodes was broken off and the electrodes touched each other, there was suddenly a gigantic spark, and sparks of hot metal flew around, both electrodes were almost half gone in a second. Needless to say, we were amazed at what had just happened as 15 year old students. 😇
@@MrCarlsonsLab yes indeed, we had a good laugh afterwards, and i think that night also "welding eyes" because we didn't use our weldingmask during the "light sabers duel" 🙂
My dad used to have a Forney VERY much like this one. He used to have me hold the ground end that was attached to the other end of whatever he wanted to weld to another piece. Every once in awhile I'd get a good little tingle. 🤣
Wow, tapping into welder power supplies, exciting. Any plans for some custom gear like DC rectifier kit, maybe thyristor or other power controls, or maybe the ultimate aluminum welding custom DCEN DCEP offset balance control circuit? Neat to see.
Oh man, was just thinking the other ranges of projects that might be legal or not using as well. Custom fab or material production, to not so savvy coms? HHHmmm
I think the bottom 3 terminals are correctly labelled, they are obviously not commoned together They are however the ground for the clamp, not to be confused with mains earth/chassis earth none of the Grounds and eath are probably not conected together or that could cause problems if weldig something that's earthed.
Seriously big Tesla coil... Or hydrolysis to make the pole truck hydrogen-powered... Or powering up an old WWII carbon arc search light... Regardless, ought to be fun :-)
If it's for arc welding probably you need to modify it. Arc welding power supplies have some serious open circuit voltage at output terminals. And it should have a series inductor needs to be removed. Can't wait to see the huge broadcast tube actually working :)
I've been welding for 50 years. Never cared for the defined taps but preferred infinite adjustable range like the Miller Thunderbolt . Was the output set by a rheostat?
I wired that same plug recently. You got to do what you have to do when power is going to be out for 7 to 10 days. (Maybe longer, we really don’t know)
A few years ago you could get used laboratory power supplies for graphite furnace spektrometers from perkin elmer. They were seperate programmable low voltage high current power supplies in 3,5 kilowatt range. Look for HGA 400 for example.
Thought you might have checked phase to ground with at least the multimeter but preferably a megger just to ensure there were no ground failures and between phases for shorts....Interested to see what you are going to power with this though.
To learn electronics in a very different and effective way, and gain access to Mr Carlson's personal designs and inventions, visit the Mr Carlson's Lab Patreon page here: www.patreon.com/MrCarlsonsLab
Learned a lot 250 Power Amp really enjoyed the video
Paul, your face shown while checking the "brutela" with the VOM was epic ...(internet gold)
If it's bigger than BBI and amp repair guy I can't wait to see it
Thumbnail much better.
I joined as a member on Oct. 1, 2024. I can't see how to access member benefits. I paid PayPal and it is completed. Where do I go to get access to benefits? All the other videos except free are locked. I joined at 9$ level. I am confused how it works. It says I am a 'free' member, not 'paid.'
Ooooo are we going down the road of Photonicinduction ? Really miss that madcaps videos.
Photonicinduction: hold my beer
In the next video.. YES!
@@MrCarlsonsLab AWRIGHT!
Photonicinduction: I ain't avin it
Didnt photonicinduction work with transformers that were over a thousand amps?
I popped it....!!!
Here comes the Mr PhotonicInduction's Lab! Nice old welder. I'm sure it weighs close to 100kg. Here in Europe you could be 100% certain that a big unit like this would be powered from 3-phase supply.
Love You Keri! I actualy have the ignitrons from an old radiator welder which would fit something like this for an old scool DC convertion... ha ha . (I wanted to give them Rons collection ower there but it fell on the shipping cost at the moment).
World Wide FM “Radio Paul” incoming? 😀
I worked once for a auto repair shop that was based out of a very large and old dealership in Baltimore Maryland. I think it was built sometime in the '30s or earlier. You could actually see in the basement different construction styles as they add it on throughout pre-war and postwar. At one point they must have been repairing very large trucks because there were at least three or four welders hardwired into the electrical system. Stick welders that were on wheels 3 ft tall and approximately 3 ft in diameter. The cable itself that went to the wall was easily 2 in diameter. Never had bravery to fire one of them up! For all I know there's still hardwired there
Glad this old boy still works just fine. Got the coffee machine ready for the next video, can't wait to get the notification, Paul 😊..much love from Germany ❤..
Bro, you already attained mad scientist level quite some time ago!
Aaaah the cliffhanger! 😅 Can't wait...
Usagi Electric said that he wants toborrow that thing to power his next valve computer.😀
Ha! Bigger than the Bendix G-15 :D
The thumbnail with you giving thumbs up on 250 Amps will it work was epic. It said yes it will work, but had the comedic effect of "well, a guess and a prayer will do it." At least for new people who don't know you yet.
Good to "see" you Paul! Thanks for sharing
73 Dean-K2WW
Thanks 👍
@@MrCarlsonsLab Is a hi power Mosfet hf amp coming? :-)
You going to practice the "It's Alive!, It's Alive!"?
Welder here! Of course I immediately had to look and the information plate on the front to see what was going on by the numbers, and saw a duty cycle of 30% @ 250 amps, interesting old machine! For those that don't know, duty cycle indicates the percentage of time that the machine is running where that indicated power is actually available before the machine becomes too hot and has to cool down. So, to put it into context of the span of 10 minutes, you could only weld at 250 amps for 3 minutes out of 10. As you decrease your power draw, the duty cycle increases and at some point becomes 100%, though I do not remember if that graphs as a curve or linear.
I’ve got a feeling we are going to hear you in Europe pretty soon.
And I think it’s going to be far over 59!
He's finally graduating to Death Rays, I'm so proud.
That welder rocks, can't wait for the project
Is Paul trying to rival WRMI in output power???
I curiously await the next video. Just try not to pull a Photonicinduction and trip out your local substation 😉
I remember working as a welder/burner at the shipyards in Thunder Bay in the 1970s. The arc welders were massive units each about the size of 4 fridges and the cables had to be "very" long to reach into areas of the 1,000 ft (read 320 meter) lake boats (read grain and iron ore carriers). The entire boat was grounded. So, not standing in puddles (very often) but standing on grounded steel all the time. In February when it snowed and was -30 Fahrenheit you would use a torch to heat up the steel you had to lay/sit on to do the welding. These big welders were smooth like butter. One time my welding gloves got a bit wet while moving some snow aside. I then grabbed a new rod and put it into the holder which of course was live. Not very pleasant but definitely didn't feel life threatening at the time. The amperage setting was around 80 amps but I would guess the voltage on the rod to the grounded ship to be around 80-90 since it did feel pretty close to holding on to wires from a 120VAC house breaker. (which I have grabbed many times and am none the worse for wear.) The real danger is the 240VAC supply. I touched that "once" on the back of a dryer while changing a light bulb and that is incredibly painful and dangerous.
Of course Carlson's advice is worth listening to - don't stand in a puddle and touch the "stinger". lol
You can definitely survice a 240 outlet ... when i was 3 years old, I was connected about 3min until my mother pulled me away from the outlet 😆
@@MrThomashorst Wow, do you remember how much it hurt?
@@kimtyson9101 Thank god I have no memories left, but it has tought me huge respect for everything related to mains voltage.
You are a real life emmet brown . .. 😂 also a legend over here in the UK . Stay safe.
I have a similar machine, they are simple and rugged! That one probably has a 80% duty cycle.
Can't wait to see what it's going to be !
He's going to produce some sort of crazy EMP using a massive magnetron.
Hmm. I watch Styropyro, so I have a high threshold for "mad scientist." That said, you have my attention, Mr. Carlson.
Such a cool device. Can confirm the device you ran on it was very exciting.
In my years in the US military we had AC to DC rectifiers that were about the same size as yours. It had terminals on the front to strap it for 12 or 24 volts. It was used to power vehicular radios in stationary settings. They all had tubes, vibrators and dynamotors. At least 100 pounds. Took 2 men to move it.
Thanks.
Mr Carlsons lab 73s to you and your wife my friend
I love the metal work on old stuff like that. Like on the cord exit.
Ooof, yeah, welding gloves better not be damp.
I think my Sencore LC meter starts flashing a warning light over 25V. LOL!
Those LKS welders were a staple of Manitoba farms. Many still in common use
Thanks!
Thank You!
Thank you!
This means the next video is definitely about starting up the FluxCapicator...
Mr Carlson, with all due respect, you are nuts! Looking forward to you powering up your town.....
I reckon you have a mercury arc rectifier tube...... 😁
A little more about " reactors " ? ;)
Thanks again
❤ These Old School Arc Welders... 3016 Was My Favorite Welding Rod...
I wonder if in the next video we'll see a massive, terrifying mercury vapor rectifier...
Now I'm wondering what the heck is Paul going to power up with it? It is a "noisy" AC constant current transformer. For electronics it may need a really big rectifier, a really big one with a heatsink to match! I guess we will find out. I can't wait!
Maybe he will finally get a Mad Scientist award from it.
Somewhere Nikola Tesla is smiling...
You aren't truly a "Mad Scientist", until your experiments like Tesla, take so much power away from the nearby city Colorado Springs in his case, that you cause it to black out ( denvergazette website has an article with a quote "And in 1899, he sent a lighting bolt more than 100 feet into the air accompanied by a thunderous boom heard up to 20 miles away. The city’s electrical equipment caught fire and Colorado Springs went dark".. This is just "Over-exuberant tinkerer" level compared to that!
Wow... some power... You really have got my attention with your upcoming mystery "project" Paul... cannot wait to see it...
Damn, even the high power multi phase plugs are terrifying over there
Yeah that "high" reading sounds familiar - I think my old Lincoln tombstone measured 48 volts on it's high setting (no load). I don't recall the low setting.
What a beast! When I was a kid,my Dad gifted me a 5vdc power supply...after some testing we figured out it current limited at 100 A. I made a right, proper electrolyzer out of it by turning the output voltage down to 2.5V, and i current limited it to 50A...which it more than happily supplied. I had great fun making hydrogen gas to fill balloons...or hydrogen and oxygen for some epic bangs. I once filled up an old, empty 10 gallon aquarium with chlorine gas just for fun. (Chlorine gas is evil: do not mess with it!)
hate to let you down mR C, but i can't figure out a broken mr sharpy pencil sharpener that won't work. it's from the 80's or there about.
I've watched many of your videos. and electronics just does not click with me. but love all yours. great stuff.
i hope you are building a 14000 watt CB amp lol..
on all my welders, I use the 50/30 amp plug and leave the neutral blade out since they don't use the neutral. that way I can plug them into any 3 wire 4 pin 30 or 50 amp receptacle, since the neutral blade it what makes them different. at least anything newer wired that has a 30amp dryer or 50 amp oven receptacle, beyond that temporary breaker and pigtail.
(NEMA 14-50R or 14-30R)
I can't want Mr Carlson. I'm so happy you're back with new projects and regular uploads. Cheers from Poland! You're awesome and I wish you your day to have 48h! The amount of work you do and we can't see it's probably monstrous! You're the definition of passion, knowledge and ability to share those two. Have a amazing day Mr Carlson! 🫡
Now that’s some big iron!
Muy buen trabajo cada día te superas más un saludo desde Cantabria
I'll watch this tomorrow... time is relative....
Just wanted to say hi and thanks for the things you showcase and teach people about... o/ cheers!
Yours is the only channel I'll believe a "never been done on RUclips before" claim. Can't wait to see what's coming!!!!
What a beast, reminds me of my welding training at school in 1993.
We also had such ancient AC welding machines there. The welding stations were next to each other, separated by a small wall to block the light from the person next to you.
One day we were welding with 4mm² electrodes, so the welding machines were set to very high amperage (think around 180A), and the teacher was away for a moment. We started hitting the electrodes of 2 welding machines against each other like the lightsabers in Star Wars. Little did we know, that all the welding machines were connected to each other via the welding tables. The moment the coating of the electrodes was broken off and the electrodes touched each other, there was suddenly a gigantic spark, and sparks of hot metal flew around, both electrodes were almost half gone in a second.
Needless to say, we were amazed at what had just happened as 15 year old students. 😇
Thanks for sharing your story, I bet that was quite the lesson!
@@MrCarlsonsLab yes indeed, we had a good laugh afterwards, and i think that night also "welding eyes" because we didn't use our weldingmask during the "light sabers duel" 🙂
Yup. Mr. C's trying to call the aliens. 😅 Maybe they can bring more coffee??? ☕👍
T'riffic, another Sunday evening with my favourite electron wrangler.
This thing is brutal
My dad used to have a Forney VERY much like this one. He used to have me hold the ground end that was attached to the other end of whatever he wanted to weld to another piece. Every once in awhile I'd get a good little tingle. 🤣
That would wake you up on a Monday morning! 😂
Watching you plug that in & turn it on around 7:45 gave me some Back to the Future Doc Brown vibes!
I could hear this puppy humming here in Cologne/Germany ;-) So give it a go, i am on my mark. 73 Paul de Olaf, DK6KF
What a beast! Ah, way before my time, I hope lol That's just amazing and it makes sense what they were thinking building this.
Looking forward to what's coming. Bring on the mad science!!
I look forward to the next video. Stay Safe.
Wow nice big power supply should be a monster power supply.
Mr Carlson always has the coolest stuff
I only hope that you are enjoying making these videos as much as I am enjoying watching them. Looking forward to the next one.
Great news of a unique video in the future! Looking forward to it Paul!
Enjoy your videos. Keep them coming. Thanks.
Mr Carlsons lab you are good at restoring antique radios and alignment of antique radios my friend
Ooooo the suspense is building! I have a similar welder in my shop disguised as a table.
Very nice!
Always a pleasure to see a new power supply exploration with you Mr. Carlson :) Cheers
Mr Carlsons lab your 250 AMP power supply is awesome my friend
And you have a good a/c welder.
Frankenstein's monster! 👍👍 I think Mr. C has got our attention. 73
Thanks for the video.
Would love to see the max size welding rod this thing would use.
I had some trouble finding those 'Forney' connectors for my old Craftsman crackerbox - I hope you can get a couple!
I don’t want to spoil the anticipation but there’s a DeLorean parked in Mr. Carlsons driveway……
Awesome again 😃 !!!! I am so thrilled to see the next video 😃 !!!!!
Mad scientist 2.0, Frankenstein is positively green. Keep up the good work
Wow, tapping into welder power supplies, exciting. Any plans for some custom gear like DC rectifier kit, maybe thyristor or other power controls, or maybe the ultimate aluminum welding custom DCEN DCEP offset balance control circuit? Neat to see.
Oh man, was just thinking the other ranges of projects that might be legal or not using as well. Custom fab or material production, to not so savvy coms? HHHmmm
I think the bottom 3 terminals are correctly labelled, they are obviously not commoned together
They are however the ground for the clamp, not to be confused with mains earth/chassis earth
none of the Grounds and eath are probably not conected together or that could cause problems if weldig something that's earthed.
He said common not earth.😂
@@rodd8170 I know, but the 3 terminals at the bottom are not common to each other and are intended for the grounding (return) clamp
Im looking forward to whatever you have tucked away!
i love current, great vid!
Thanks!
Man I’m so excited. I bet there is going to be arcs, sparks, and if it gets really crazy maybe some government sharks.
Seriously big Tesla coil... Or hydrolysis to make the pole truck hydrogen-powered... Or powering up an old WWII carbon arc search light... Regardless, ought to be fun :-)
If it's for arc welding probably you need to modify it. Arc welding power supplies have some serious open circuit voltage at output terminals. And it should have a series inductor needs to be removed. Can't wait to see the huge broadcast tube actually working :)
High frequency Dialectic or induction welding useing "THE VALVE may be "
Mr Carlsons lab your RUclips videos are awesome my friend
I've been welding for 50 years. Never cared for the defined taps but preferred infinite adjustable range like the Miller Thunderbolt .
Was the output set by a rheostat?
Top notch content! I'm excited to see what this is going to be used in!
C'mon. What project could top anything from Electroboom?
I wired that same plug recently. You got to do what you have to do when power is going to be out for 7 to 10 days. (Maybe longer, we really don’t know)
Can't wait to see what is next.
A few years ago you could get used laboratory power supplies for graphite furnace spektrometers from perkin elmer. They were seperate programmable low voltage high current power supplies in 3,5 kilowatt range. Look for HGA 400 for example.
Of course, if this thing is functioning? Are you kidding me the great, Mr. Carlson will get it functioning no matter what 😂😂😂
Nice one, Paul!
8:30. I said out loud, “Does that look like a very good place to set that meter?” And immediately, Mr. C answered, “Hmm, maybe not.” 😂😂
A decent transformer for DIY Lab PSU
I just built one using EpD step-down transformer for a nice DC supply. I have 1 more transformer and should be close to 600 amps dc.
AC welders always make me twitchy... LOL
Thought you might have checked phase to ground with at least the multimeter but preferably a megger just to ensure there were no ground failures and between phases for shorts....Interested to see what you are going to power with this though.