By FAR the easiest way to fix this is to pay the $250 and thank your lucky stars
you have a welder that's supported for parts. You'll forget the $250 soon and
you'll be back in business. You could ruin your machine fiddling around with the
electronics if you don't know what you're doing, and *nobody* commercial will
repair a small PC board cheaper than that. Sure, if your brother is an
electronics bench whiz with a mountain of test equipment, you might be able to
fix it cheaper, but then you wouldn't be posting.
A Syncrowave 250 is easily a $2500 machine. Paying 10% of the value of a machine
to fix it is no big deal.
I would also suggest that the OP count himself damn lucky. All he has to do is
swap in a readily-available board.
GWE
Brent wrote:
Ever think you might be making a mountain out of a molehill?
Unless the machine is totally spare and not missed the time hunting
around for the board or the time picking through the electronics might
not be worth it?
And if you source the board will the repair shop bill your for
diagnosis time?
assuming by some miracle you find it for say $100 an hour or 2 at the
repair shop will have that back up at 250
just like unless you have an electronics repair guy on staff or are
brave the cost of having a guy rebuild the board with cheaper
components form a supplier like Acklands youre still going to spend
more labor rebuilding it
I'm making the assumption that youre not comfortble rebuilding the
board otherwise i think i'd see this post asking about timer board
components on sci.electronics.repair rather than SEJW.
I honestly think that other than the few alternate places mentioned for
a genuine miller board youre WAY better off taking the sticker shock.
Amazingly miller is one of those companies that actually MAKE and
support their products. Its not something common anymore but millers
OEM is Miller and they still ahve readily available replacement parts
for a machine as ols as yours. there is something to be said there
I have a better way to look at the sticker shock. How old is the
machine? if youre calling it older i would assume you mean MINIMUM 10
years possibly 15-20 if its needed one 250 dollar part after 10 years
of use thats FAR less than a tank of argon a year in upkeep and wahts
it worth without the timer board. let alone if its closer to 15/20
years old thats less than a pack of tungstens a year in "maintenance
and upkeep"
otherwise i'm sure there are dozens of people on this group who would
pay what the broken tig welder portion is worth to fix it
soka wrote:
One of my welders is an older Miller Syncrowave 250. The timer board
for the relay controlling the gas needs to be replaced. It's a very
small PC board and my local supplier can get one from Miller but it
will cost me $250. Am looking for information on other places to
contact for this part and other parts in the future.
Thank you
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