Between the mig and stick I never felt I needed any other welders. But for about $70 to convert my stick to a scratch TIG I decided to see what all the fuss is about.
Well I'll be darned this TIG stuff is fun 
Until tonight I knew almost nothing about TIG and scratch TIG so everything from unpacking and putting together the TIG torch, grinding the tungsten, hooking up the Argon etc all happened a few hours ago. For practice all I had was some 16ga sheet and a very eager me
Ran a few flat beads to get the hang of the scratch start. I thought I was going to need more tungsten than the filler rod lol. After a few experiments I started to get the hang of it and started adding filler metal. I still have long ways to go but so far I'm liking TIG especially the clean burn part (no spatter and smoke filled garage).
Time to go get some more scrap metal to practice.
Anyone else doing old-school scratch start or has the rest of the world moved on to the fancy inverters and HF TIG already?
Well I'll be darned this TIG stuff is fun 
Until tonight I knew almost nothing about TIG and scratch TIG so everything from unpacking and putting together the TIG torch, grinding the tungsten, hooking up the Argon etc all happened a few hours ago. For practice all I had was some 16ga sheet and a very eager me
Ran a few flat beads to get the hang of the scratch start. I thought I was going to need more tungsten than the filler rod lol. After a few experiments I started to get the hang of it and started adding filler metal. I still have long ways to go but so far I'm liking TIG especially the clean burn part (no spatter and smoke filled garage).
Time to go get some more scrap metal to practice.
Anyone else doing old-school scratch start or has the rest of the world moved on to the fancy inverters and HF TIG already?

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