I've never understood Miller to be the "plasma folks". I lean towards Hypertherm when I think of plasma cutters. Like most things that folks don't own and haven't used, the hype about them is pretty much just that, hype. They are a glorified cutting torch, that's it. If you gave me one tool to buy for cutting without precision, it would be a good oxy-acetylene set up. Not because it is better than a plasma, but because you can cut, weld, braze, heat, and blow stuff up with one. Plasma is a single function tool that does one thing and not always well.
Need to run a scarfing tip to cut close to an axle tube to cut a bracket off? Not gonna happen with a plasma. Got some water in your compressor? Now you get to buy some more disposables and they aren't cheap. Got a compressor a bit on the smaller size? The plasma typically uses a lot of air.
If you do get one, avoid one that short circuits the arc when the tip makes contact with the surface you are cutting.
When it comes to making tabs, brackets, cuts in the frame for outboarding, I would not trade 1 good angle grinder with cut-off discs for 2 plasma cutters.
This cut and many more like it was done with an angle grinder, good cut-off disc, and no clean up. That is the cut done in one pass per cut. If you did it with a plasma, you run the risk of over cut so you err on the side of under cut and now you have a lot of grinding. More grinding than I spend just making the cut. Plasma isn't more accurate, cleaner, or much easier to use than a cutting torch and about all it is good for is roughing stuff in.
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