Im not a MIG guy, I dont claim to be, but I think your jumping ahead of yourself here.
Start off by running beads on coupons (little squares/retangles maybe 1/8-3/16 thick). For Mig, I was started off learning beads in the verticle down position. I find it to be the easiest. Set of the plate verticle and travel from top to bottom. Essenially you want to lightly drag the gas cup along the plate, just barely touching it (dont rely on the plate as a guide because you wont always hav one). Im not sure about the HOBART gun but I believe the miller guns (at least on the older 250's) and whatever guns came with linde wirefeeders, if the handle itself is close to parallel to the work and your dragging the cup, the wire angle is close to where it should be.
Traveling top to bottom like this is the easiest way to actually control the puddle itself, or so I think, just because of the way the cable is situated, the cable's weight is almost helping you progress instead of fighting it i the flat position. First start just running straight beads, try to get a piece of metal 8-10 inches long. If you have soapstone, mark some straightlines to try and follow as best you can. Once you get this decent where the beads are an even width, try manipulating the puddle. I use a bit of a curved weave, but I think everybody has thier own style and youll probably pick up yours as well.
Set up the machine according to the chart for a baseline, and try to keep the gun just ahead of the puddle as your traveling. If you go too slow, well, then your gunna be replacing the gas cup thing (at least thats what it is in TIG, i forget the correct name)
As PAtoyota mentioned, with mig you want a nice ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ.... not a crackcrackcrackcrackcrack; this usually indicates the wire feed is too slow for the other variables such as heat and travel. Wire speed may be perfect but its too "hot" (amperage too high) so its burning too quickly, you will have to play around a bit. Think of the process like this... Wire feeds out, arc starts, wire "melts" and gets deposited into weld pool, arc goes out and process restarts. Your trying to achieve this so that its almost as if the arc never went out(but it DOES, which is why mig has a small HAZ). If you hear the CRACK-CRACK-CRACk imagine the wire as feeding out, arc establishing, melting back, then there is a lag for the wire to feed out enough for the arc to restablish and it starts over again. If the wire speed is too fast, your going to be putting down a ton of filler so you will speed up your weld thinking your going too slow and it will be a **** weld.
Once you start running some decent beads, take two pieces of steel, tack together at each end and try joining them with a single bead. Then put one end in a vice and do some "destructive testing" to find out how good the joint really was
Im sure Ill find something stupid that I said or that I left something out tommorow morning, so ill fix it later.
Good luck!!
Jim