and before too long you'll be wondering how you got by without one.
Find a community college nearby and take night classes or find a good friend and turn them into an enemy teaching you how...
You can teach yourself but it will take a long time and you might learn some bad habits that will stay with you a long time. Not to mention that it will take a LONG time to teach yourself. By taking clases you can also learn on different machines and types of welding to figure out what you would like to buy.
Exactly!
I can't even begin to list the small household / garage / outdoor lawn repairs I've been able to fix in minutes because I had a welder ready to fire in the garage. As well as the car/truck projects that is gets used for.
Be prepared, you will also get many friends go "OH you can weld? I've got this and that I need welded... " feels good to help them out 'sometimes'.

+1
People get too caught up with the learn by doing method that their gramps told them about. Learn the science at school and then perfect your technique at home. There really is alot of science behind welding (it is a mini steel mill after all) and to get good you have to know why things happen. I took a couple of welding courses while doing a tool and die apprenticeship and am thinking about a refresher. The part about getting bad habits can't be overstated. Practice does't make perfect....Only perfect practice makes perfect.
not as good , a little warpage. I really want to take a class and sharpen up.
I'm self-taught.
I suggest you start with the textbook "Modern Welding" by Althouse, Turnquist, and Bowditch. This is likely the textbook you would be using in welding school.
Once you've read the book, go buy and OFW (oxy/fuel) rig and start practicing on sheet metal. Learn how to use a cutting torch, too. With practice, you can make a finished cut, with only a light grind required to get to bright metal in 3" plate.
Once you have OFW down, move to SMAW (stick welding) and a Lincoln "buzz box" or similar. Here, I suggest Lincoln's "The Procedure Handbook of Arc Welding". This is an excellent book, although rather expensive new. However, it focuses on arc welding in a design and production environment. One of the main topics of interest in the book is the design and fabrication of low-distortion weldments.
If you study the books, then apply the knowledge in small steps, constantly referring back to the books and correcting yourself, you'll do well.

C'mon...you KNOW that is too much work!!! Everyone just wants to buy an "molten lava caulking gun" (MIG) and "glue" metal together!!! Who wants to learn the hard way anymore????![]()
Find a community college nearby and take night classes or find a good friend and turn them into an enemy teaching you how...
You can teach yourself but it will take a long time and you might learn some bad habits that will stay with you a long time. Not to mention that it will take a LONG time to teach yourself. By taking clases you can also learn on different machines and types of welding to figure out what you would like to buy.
I was self taught, I started with MIG and did that for a few years, I was ok at it. But I hit limits on what I could weld with MIG on a regular basis (I play with Aluminum bodied cars) and needed a TIG. I tried to take classes at my local college but they no longer offer classes so I broke down and went to the Lincoln Welding school...absolute best week of vacation I have ever taken. Wasted one day on MIG which turned out to not be a waste as I learned a lot, the other 4 days were TIG. It was worth it, big time worth it.
I am sure I could have learned on my own but at the school I did it in a short time and they provide all the materials you can use, I used a lot of gas and rods and probably saved money in the long run. That was 4 years ago and the MIG has not been turned on since.
