Snap On MW120 MIG Welder

When I bought my current miller mig I talked to the Mac and the snapon guys I had at the time.
The snapon guy was very informative about what they had at the time , gave me the name of the company that made them at the time for snap on and an "800-number" straight to that company. This was back in 97. Don't remember the name of that company.
The Mac guy said that theirs except for the cheapest bargain basement model were all made by miller and just painted Mac red instead of miller blue. I liked the idea of being able to have bought it at $20/week at the time but instead of that I went to a local welding supply house and talked to them. They had the same 4 welders that Mac was selling (except for paint color) and the comparable one that was closest in price to it's comparable model made for Mac was 1/2 of the price as Mac wanted. As you went bigger in the line, the price disparity got wider between Mac and the welding supply house.
I got the 3rd biggest in line at the welding place for what Mac was wanting for the smallest one in that line. (Which didn't include mac's cheapest one, started at miller's 2nd step up at the time) I had burnt out 2 110 powered machines to that point (the first of which was the Mac El cheapo that was below the line they sourced from miller, that is gotten from my previous Mac guy as a repo.
So because of that I decided I definitely didn't want a 110 machine,no way no how. So I got a millermatic 185. Which runs off of 220. I've replaced the liner once in all of those years, otherwise I have had absolutely no problem with it. I wish I'd have bought that one first, as I spent (wasted) more money on those two than my MM185 cost me. If I'd have waited like 10 years to get my own mig, (at the time I couldn't, I needed a welder) I'd go for something like a Lincoln 135 mig or a Hobart handler 140 Both 110 powered, and both more robust than my first 2 migs were.
And in case you didn't know, miller and Hobart welders are both owned by the same parent company.