







🔥 Weld Like a Pro with Precision & Power ⚡
The RX WELD Argon Regulator Flow Meter is a high-precision gas regulator designed for MIG and TIG welding. Featuring an adjustable flow range of 10-60 SCFH and compatibility with CGA-580 tanks, it offers seamless connection to Argon, Helium, and CO2 gas sources. Built from durable brass, this regulator withstands harsh environments and comes with a complete accessory kit including a 6.6 ft hose and mounting hardware, making it an economical and reliable choice for professional welders.



| ASIN | B08P5BNHBX |
| Batteries Required? | No |
| Batteries included? | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | 422,354 in DIY & Tools ( See Top 100 in DIY & Tools ) 338 in TIG Welding Equipment |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (2,842) |
| Date First Available | 14 Dec. 2022 |
| Item Package Quantity | 1 |
| Item Weight | 953 g |
| Item model number | RX191D-WH |
| Manufacturer | RX WELDER |
| Part Number | 191ARCOMBO |
| Power Source | PowerSource |
| Product Dimensions | 8.89 x 12.45 x 16 cm; 952.54 g |
| Style | Compact |
M**D
A good product,
Unfortunately will not fit my gas bottles ,having problems trying to return product, need some help from you thanks Markus
B**E
Hose fittings not compatible
Ordered the regulator flowmeter kit along with the hose. The regulator and flowmeter look reasonable quality. The supplied hose also looks reasonable quality with crimped male fittings at each end. The issue I have is the hose fittings are too big for the supplied regulator connection. The regulator comes with a loose hose connection, so in order to get this to work, I would have to cut off one of the hose crimped connections, then fit the supplied hose connection with jubilee clamp. The reason I purchased the regulator kit with hose was to have proper crimped connections that should last longer then my old pushfit connectors. Sent back for refund.
C**N
Seems like a decent quality regulator
A**R
This is a good quality product at a great price. Comes with adaptors to install different ways as required
M**5
Whilst the regulator comes with a gas line it has completely wrong fitting attached. You do get a single female coupling and a poor quality hose clamp- you have to cut you gas line . Also the flow meter (floating ball) has Argon and CO2 scale. Not sure on accuracy and male cone fittings are nor rubber nut machined brass. Not exact mating to cylinder outlets so care and check for leaks regularly- additionally the main fitting to the bottle is a USA NPT thread and does not fit Australia BSP gas bottle threads. - whilst you can change the nit - the added cost and messing around- not worth the headache. Do not buy for Australia
A**R
Works very well as a replacement regulator for my Miller MIG welder. Easy to setup with the various supplied fittings that help connect this regulator to a variety of machines and applications. I now prefer the ball style gauge over dial style regulators. So far this regulator meets my needs and I have no negatives.
A**R
I'm not a pro welder. If you're looking for such opinions, skip mine. I'm a home-jobber, hobby-welder. I needed a flow meter to get my mig setup to do aluminum wire. This flow meter attached just fine to my argon bottle, no issues. The hose it came with is fine too. I detected no leaks once it was all snugged up (I just used soapy water spray). I have no way to test if the flow-rate I'm setting is accurate. I used settings I found on-line (~15 to 20 ft/min), did my aluminum migging and the parts were joined. My welds don't look great, but it worked... my destructive testing tells me the welds are at least as strong as the base metal (aluminum angle). What I could notice was I didn't get the ugly porosity that low/no shielding gas would show. So, as far as I know, the flow-meter is passing out enough gas to do the job. Maybe its too much?.. no idea. More may be a waste than 'the right amount', but the welds are cleaner than if it was too low. I tested the low/no shielding gas use-case just so I could see what it looks like... and its very ugly. Look online for pics/vids of bad shielding on aluminum welds... its unmistakable when you see it. Now, when I say 'ugly', I mean beyond the clumpy, uneven welds a home-jobber like me puts down... b/c my welds are 'ugly'. I don't stack dimes,... I may lay down a dime, then a quarter, then a nickel... repeatedly. Bad form, bad movement control, all the wrong stuff. So, what I mean is, the low-shielding-gas issues present as pits/pot-holes and dirty/dark spots in the weld... that would make even an otherwise pro-welder's nice 'dime-stack' look like a pitted, dusky looking mess. Once you've seen it, you know what to look for. Despite my good results, I'd say that any pro is not going to use or trust this 'cheap' meter, nor should they. If your welding is mission-critical and/or lives are on the line, use the good stuff... and any pro welder knows that anyway. If you're like me and just need to stick some metal together for small projects where if they fail no one dies?.. then perhaps this flow-meter is just fine for you as well.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 week ago