lastminute
Established Member
Advice please....just needed for the odd weld...confused by all the gas v gasless inverter or non inverter.
Thanks for any help
Gerry
Thanks for any help
Gerry
Gasless mig is a waste of timeAdvice please....just needed for the odd weld...confused by all the gas v gasless inverter or non inverter.
Thanks for any help
Gerry
Stick is the cheaper alternative and the welds are generally far better with mig it's easy to perform a weld which looks nice but is actually garbage where as with MMA it's mostly good also you can weld anything mild steel with 3.2 mm rods at about 100 to 130 amps .Welding tutor brutally takes the mick out of gasless mig.
Whatever you choose, avoid that.
A decent stick welder is simple, reliable and effective if you are working on thicker material.
Good rods help.
If your using an old Oxford it will be an AC current which is a little more difficult, also it will spatter a little more than dc.It's YEARS since I did a welding course, and really haven't used either Mig or MMA much recently. But would be interested to know from you professionals why striking the MMA arc gets more difficult the lower the amperage set? With an ancient oil-cooled Oxford, it's pretty much impossible for me to reliably strike an arc below 80A setting. In most cases, it just means switching to the Mig for thin stuff, but on the odd occasions outside when it's blowing a hooley, MMA is really needed for that thin stuff.
A couple of points, if you have been a gas welder then it is easy to pickup because you already have the feel for feeding the rod into the pool, it is also easier if you have a TIG with HF start. Once mastered though there is little you cannot weld with the right machine.Tig is tricky to pick up, for a beginner I wouldn't bother.
Mention gasless MIG amongst welders and it always gets a laugh, you cannot beat a shield of a gas that is of your choice. Ok the sale of cheap MIGs has never helped the MIGs popularity, what was the phrase, porcupine welds.Welding tutor brutally takes the mick out of gasless mig.
Interesting. I'd heard odd mentions of the advantages of them, but had tried to ignore it so as not to be tempted to spend more of my pension!Ps a DC inverter is an order of magnitude easier to use
Sorry to broaden the question at bit. But what about a brazing set?
I would like to join the odd bit of metal from time to time and occasionally heat tools to cherry red and anneal stuff. Probably not fancy metals, but occasionally to make a strong supporting structures and repairs (not to cars or where inspection/ safety is paramount). I don't want to fill the garage with stuff that is only used occasionally as I'm a wood worker, but there is only so much I can do with bolts and rivets. So something that would be quite versatile.
I did a bit of welding at school a long, long time ago. Good teacher. Oxy, arc and brazing. And remember brazing to be a bit simpler and good for joining non alike metals as well as like metals and is strong. Also noticed advice elsewhere on the forum about getting quality machines as its hard for beginners to learn on cheap ones, that makes quite a tough entry point, as we have to spend a few hundred pounds before knowing if it really is for us.
So my question is really the same, MIG, MMA or how about brazing? The consensus seems to rule out TIG as I wont be using it much to justify learning and the kit (I do a fair amount of electrical soldering keeping the house and kids electronics going etc ) I was thinking of getting a propane torch to do some simple for cherry red hardening and then tempering the odd tool. The boys would like to do a bit of forging on a simple charcoal tin pan furnace (lined with plaster). So really my question is what about brazing or having a hot joining tool for general use. If you had to choose one hot metal joining method that is versatile what would it be? Sorry if this distracts somewhat from Lostminutes well focused question, but I would be interested in your broader perspective. Thanks
I agree it is a step up but maybe not just a small one as the big difference is that unlike with brazing, with welding you are melting the base metals and will have a weldpool to control whilst feeding a rod into it.If you can braze, gas welding is just a small step up from this.
Enter your email address to join: