I hate when something I want is discontinued - it makes me go buy one before they disappear. I'm now the proud owner of a Hobart Ironman 230.
I looked at the new Ironman 240, and I did note that the 240 specs were very close to the Miller 252 which was interesting. But for me simple beats complicated; I prefer taps over one more circuit board to fail. The other thing that swayed me is that the new 240 spec sheet had this note (where the 230 did not):
"Note: Running off of generator power is not recommended for the IronMan 240."
I don't like limitations like this, particularly since I've had to run off generators before. Sometimes it's just more convenient than a REALLY long extension cord. I wonder if this is a function of the infinitely variable voltage system on the 240?
BTW - does anyone know how the infinitely variable voltage output systems actually work? I'm wondering if its an inductance or phase control type system. I ask this because I noted that the KVA of the 252 and new 240 are MUCH higher than the 230. The 230 has a KVA of 7.4 for an output of 6.3KW (85%), while the 240/252 has a KVA 11.4 for an output of 7.1KW (62%). It seems that the power factor on the 230 is much better at rated load than the 240/252, and the only thing I can think of is if they are somehow manipulating input voltage/current phase on the 240/252 as a means of controlling output voltage.
Anyone know what's going on here?
Just curious.
Beuford