TheEquineFencer
Well-known member
I'd go sign up at a local Community College and take welding...if it's a Continuing Ed class do it as a live project.
sberry, you are correct, 99% of what I will be welding is steel.
99% of what you see is made of, produced with, and delivered by steel. We live in a steel dependent world. 99% of all steel is welded by mig ( guessing)
I had clients who worked in the industry who took community college welding courses to use the equipment to complete paying jobs. It isn't a bad place to learn a thing or two, either.
The MM252 (especially the last two generations!) Is a world class machine. The MM211 is pretty darn good. Get one. Get any machine you like. Start welding. You can build so many cool things you will be pissed you didn't start earlier.
Forget tig until you can tell aluminum from zinc from titanium from stainless at a distance without handling. Forget tig until you get into nuclear reactors, home petrochemical refineries, marine transportation, or aircraft. Forget tig until duplex stainless, precipitate hardening, maraging, sigma phase, or beta become part of your daily vocabulary.
I can't tell you enough how cool it is to have one machine, one wire, and one gas to weld everything you tackle. Just turn one knob. Concentrate on developing your skill, knowledge and experience. "Just do it."
I had clients who worked in the industry who took community college welding courses to use the equipment to complete paying jobs. It isn't a bad place to learn a thing or two, either.
99% of what you see is made of, produced with, and delivered by steel. We live in a steel dependent world. 99% of all steel is welded by mig ( guessing)
I had clients who worked in the industry who took community college welding courses to use the equipment to complete paying jobs. It isn't a bad place to learn a thing or two, either.
The MM252 (especially the last two generations!) Is a world class machine. The MM211 is pretty darn good. Get one. Get any machine you like. Start welding. You can build so many cool things you will be pissed you didn't start earlier.
Forget tig until you can tell aluminum from zinc from titanium from stainless at a distance without handling. Forget tig until you get into nuclear reactors, home petrochemical refineries, marine transportation, or aircraft. Forget tig until duplex stainless, precipitate hardening, maraging, sigma phase, or beta become part of your daily vocabulary.
I can't tell you enough how cool it is to have one machine, one wire, and one gas to weld everything you tackle. Just turn one knob. Concentrate on developing your skill, knowledge and experience. "Just do it."
Practice, practice, practice and having a good machine does make a difference when you're trying to learn. You can weld without having to fight the equipment.
An auto-darkening helmet will help also, I never got the grasp of trying to flip down a helmet .
The auto set is kind of pointless. Just experiment.
I'll be checking out a metal supplier later this month too. It sounds like they only sell in 20-24ft lengths and provide a single free cut.
You might check with your local weld fab shops. I have a local shop that makes drop-off material and material in their scrap bin available to home hobbyists at very low cost. I recently picked up over 400 lbs of 1/4" plate drop-offs for $50.
The 120 bottle is good. Get 10# spool of wire.
Buy some angle iron and build a welding cart and welding bench.
Perhaps build a shelf to store stuff in the garage.
Go to a bodyshop and ask for an old fender or door to weld on. Tell them you are trying to lear to weld, odds are they will give it to you.
A friend of my daughter is an ‘artist’. She wanted to lear to weld. So I let her come over and she welded some scrap junk car parts I had around into some pieces of industrial art. I heard she sold a couple of them
I think the BBQ with Franklin guy has a 212, showed him making a smoker. I think the upside of a 212 is that its essentially a 211 class machine, maybe better I don't know for sure but it has a full size chassis and will take a full size spool of wire. It doesn't mean a lot to true hobby types but if a guy is welding a lot it might.
The 252 is way heavier than the 212 which is basically a juiced 211 class machine in a bigger chassis. The 252 will output near 300A at a lower duty cycle. It probably outputs at near 28v, it's a powerful machine. Requires an 8 wire at full output. I think it will spray a 045 wire.
Did you look at the spec's? The 211 and 212 have nothing in common. 211 is rated "150 A at 21.5 VDC, 40% duty cycle (240V)", whereas the 212 and 252 are rated the same "160 Amps at 24.5 VDC, 60% duty cycle".
So if the 212 and the 252 are the same, what makes it cost the extra $500?
So if the 212 and the 252 are the same, what makes it cost the extra $500?