Ok so not going to read all the other comments but I know lots will say school etc. If you want to really get technical about it go that way. But I decided to weld went and bought a mig welder and started welding. Get yourself an average mid level mig welder, most come with an auto darken helmet and gloves. You can start with flux core wire .35 or .30 this allows you to not use gas but it’s messier welds. Pick up any scraps you can old bed frames etc. look up a few videos and start welding. I made my first project be the cart that holds my welder.I'm a handy guy, fix stuff all the time.
I have not dived into welding at all.
So please be gentle...
What should I buy/learn about in regards to welding types etc?
Fixing stuff, trailers, gates, broken bolts etc.
I will not be building frames for race cars.
What's my intro into this world?
Thanks!
I have that TIG and it's been the same price for over 3 years. I'm very happy with it.Here is an average Hobart for mig
But I have heard great things on these
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MIGMax™ 215 Industrial Welder with 120/240V Input
Amazing deals on this Migmax 215 Industrial Mig Welder at Harbor Freight. Quality tools & low prices.www.harborfreight.com
This is the tig setup I use and you can stick weld with it but tig is tougher to learn.
The difference being you can still get the Miller board - good luck getting an Eastwood one. Send me the Miller, I'll dispose of itA local weld shop scrapped his Miller and Lincoln’s and bought couple of Easwoods after he lost a board on his Miller. His reasoning was that he could buy three Eastwood units for what one equivalent Miller would cost, and the Eastwoods have a three year warranty. That, plus the parts for his crapped out Miller would have been more than what a new Eastwood cost. He’s pretty happy with his Eastwoods.
Lots of old Millers out there with failed boards that simply don’t make economic sense to keep running.
Absolutely! Don’t try something thin like a car body to start out. Start with something like 1/8 thickLearn on something thicker than sheetmetal and save yourself some early frustration. Then work your way "down".
Lots of good stuff above. Then go buy a Primeweld 140 or 180. THE best value for the money out there, and the customer support is LEGIONS better than anyone else. Anyone.
primeweld.com
primeweld.com
Doesn’t matter if you can get a brand new import with a three year warranty at less cost than a board for a twenty year old Miller, does it?The difference being you can still get the Miller board - good luck getting an Eastwood one. Send me the Miller, I'll dispose of it![]()
No one is arguing Miller is a value welder- heck even their parent company makes Hobarts for that. Used board and board repair are both options - on the Miller.Doesn’t matter if you can get a brand new import with a three year warranty at less cost than a board for a twenty year old Miller, does it?
I have a Primeweld, couple of HTPs, and an almost new Miller. I am not convinced the Miller was a good value, although it is a nice machine.
The Primeweld was a good value.
I forgot to add, the inexpensive multi-process machine that say they do BOTH MIG and TIG typically have some serious TIG limitations.Some of the "off brands" (Tooliom) that are very inexpensive (TL-250M) have gotten good reviews on YouTube. Remember, the cheap ones are for hobbyist ! They have short duty cycles and probably do NOT come with a gas regulator. The torch/gun they come with are also not the best.
My additional 2¢ ! Like painting, good quality welds require preparation.Can't really help you, but here is advice a teacher in college gave us in a welding class. "If you don't learn anything else in class, know that if you have a weld that needs to work, get someone who knows how to do it."
Welding w/ wire demands accuracy of your arc. If you cant see it it wont look or be the best.
Add a strong light attached to your helmet. Directed at the weld. Even w/ 20/20 vision you’ll crank out better welds w/ cheaters.

But I have heard great things on these
![]()
MIGMax™ 215 Industrial Welder with 120/240V Input
Amazing deals on this Migmax 215 Industrial Mig Welder at Harbor Freight. Quality tools & low prices.www.harborfreight.com
mig and stick will do everything for you,I'm a handy guy, fix stuff all the time.
I have not dived into welding at all.
So please be gentle...
What should I buy/learn about in regards to welding types etc?
Fixing stuff, trailers, gates, broken bolts etc.
I will not be building frames for race cars.
What's my intro into this world?
Thanks!
I tried everything and I still couldn't see using flux core,Yes yes yes, you have to see it to get a good weld. I mostly have issues with light as even when my auto darkening helmet hasn't switched to dark mode it still shades enough light that if I don't have enough light on my weld area I can miss when I starting my arc.
I have placed lights on my work surface before but that doesn't always get light where I want and flash issues usually end up wrecking the light. I'll have to try the helmet light suggestion but I also just recently saw this type of light that attaches to your torch.
I suspect it might suffer flash issues while welding but it sure seems like it would be a great way to get light where you need it. Does anybody have any opinions or experience using one of these?
AHP Alpha-TIG 203 or AHP Alpha-TIG 225 ?This is the tig setup I use and you can stick weld with it but TIG is tougher to learn.
Alpha TIG ...
You need a torch and a regulator and gas. Scratch start. More difficult for novices.for people that dont know, if you have an old dc crackerbox, you can scratch tig with them
I am glad you like your Hobart Handler 140 ! If ones primary goal is TIG, I would not buy that machine. The Alpha TIG are much better for $100 more. Of course, they do NOT do MIG !I have that TIG and it's been the same price for over 3 years. I'm very happy with it.
Buy a machine that has a MINIMUM of these 2 features
- Dual input voltage (both 120VAC and 240VAC). Even if you do not have 240VAC available today, you will find that 120VAC is limiting.
- Gas capable. (You will quickly find out, that the quality of your welds are much better with gas.)
The light on the helmet is a good trick if you already have an old helmet, but if he's buying a new helmet there's no reason not to get an auto-darkening helmet.Couple personal experiences on MIG & flux core.
Welding w/ wire demands accuracy of your arc. If you cant see it it wont look or be the best.
Add a strong light attached to your helmet. Directed at the weld. Even w/ 20/20 vision you’ll crank out better welds w/ cheaters.
Proficiency comes from lots of practice. If you do it for a living you get good quickly. If you do it once every three months, you forget the subtleties that make it ll come together.
Yesterday.
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I deal with shops commercially, on a large scale, every day.A local weld shop scrapped his Miller and Lincoln’s and bought couple of Easwoods after he lost a board on his Miller. His reasoning was that he could buy three Eastwood units for what one equivalent Miller would cost, and the Eastwoods have a three year warranty. That, plus the parts for his crapped out Miller would have been more than what a new Eastwood cost. He’s pretty happy with his Eastwoods.
Lots of old Millers out there with failed boards that simply don’t make economic sense to keep running.
Even auto dark, which is essential leaves a lot of filter that obstructs my need for pinpoint vision.🫣The light on the helmet is a good trick if you already have an old helmet, but if he's buying a new helmet there's no reason not to get an auto-darkening helmet.
Just about the only shop in town, so that makes a difference. The next closest shops are fifteen miles away, but they mostly do production / aerospace type welding, so they’re pretty booked up and don’t do smaller non production run jobs, for the most part. This guy lives on small fab projects.I deal with shops commercially, on a large scale, every day.
If I walked into a potentially new vendor's shop, and saw he only had Eastwood machines, I'd turn right around and leave.
I can say confidently that any of my peers in similar positions to me would do the same.
I understand justifying cheaper units for home use, but not commercially. Like it or not, if someone wants to be taken as a serious shop, they have some image requirements to maintain. That may not be fair, but that's how it is.
Bean counters in the industry will switch brands of pencils, if they figure at 3 cents saved per pencil and each pencil lasting 99.7% as long will save them xxxx dollhairs per year.Doesn’t matter if you can get a brand new import with a three year warranty at less cost than a board for a twenty year old Miller, does it?
I have a Primeweld, couple of HTPs, and an almost new Miller. I am not convinced the Miller was a good value, although it is a nice machine.
The Primeweld was a good value.
primeweld.com
primeweld.com
Right. The op is working in his garage, and not starting a multi million dollar welding and fabrication business.Some things are not easily quantifiable, if they were quantifiable and consequently added to the equation, bean counters may make different decisions. The problem is seldom do they talk to the guy in the shop……
Where I work, it is all Millers. We had some Lincoln’s years ago and they welded fine, but when you needed a circuit board you couldn’t just get that, you had to get all the guts just about. With Millers, we found we were able to get just the circuit board we needed. It’s not often something breaks, but this is a shop where the welders are running all day every day.
I could not justify a $6,000 AC TIG welder for home use when I could get a decent one for $900.
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Dynasty® 210 TIG Welders | MillerWelds
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TIG225X AC/DC TIG Welder With Pulse
Meet the powerful and versatile TIG225X AC/DC TIG Welder—PrimeWeld's top-selling model! Equipped with everything you need to start welding, it caters to both hobbyists and professionals. Order yours online today at PrimeWeld! How to Choose Your Torch: CK17 - 12.5ft - 150 amps - Air Cooled CK17 -...primeweld.com
The OP is looking for something at home, not a production shop.
Sorry my friend, but they do not need to talk to the guy in the shop. At any sizable company it becomes "MIG welder #1" with a purchase price and acquisition date along with a rolling $$ spent on repairs and then the date which they retire it and it cost xxxx $$/daySome things are not easily quantifiable, if they were quantifiable and consequently added to the equation, bean counters may make different decisions. The problem is seldom do they talk to the guy in the shop……
You don't need to start a multimillion dollar business to grab a calculator, or around here perhaps anRight. The op is working in his garage, and not starting a multi million dollar welding and fabrication business.
I guess this is GJ, though, where many posters don’t have that distinction.
If I hear the trite phrase buy once, cry once” one more time, I’m going to puke![]()
They may not have to, but sometimes they should. I’ve seen first hand many a great decision on paper turn out to be a disaster.Sorry my friend, but they do not need to talk to the guy in the shop. At any sizable company it becomes "MIG welder #1" with a purchase price and acquisition date along with a rolling $$ spent on repairs and then the date which they retire it and it cost xxxx $$/day
There is a reason why they pay the bean counters(usually good money) to do the bean counting...
Perfect exampleI bought a low hour 2nd hand Syncrowave 250DX for home use, with the understanding that it would basically never wear out under my limited use.
6 months later the main board shat itself, $2k USD for the replacement + installation. I got rid of the machine for basically scrap value instead and bought a cheaper inverter machine from a respected, but still made in China, brand. Zero regrets, the new machine was half the cost of the Miller board replacement and hasn't had a single issue. I don't think I'll ever buy another Miller machine.
If that was common miller wouldn't be where they are.Perfect example
I have used a carbon stick in the electrode holder to strike an arc and use everdur silicon bronze filler rod. That did not require any shielding gas.You need a torch and a regulator and gas. Scratch start. More difficult for novices.
Actually it's extremely common with the Syncrowave's, a quick google shows hundreds of the same failure mode and Miller even introduced an updated main board and a few other replacement components that (apparently) make it less likely to brick itself, but won't recall the original machines with the known fault.If that was common miller wouldn't be where they are.
Toyota's don't hold their resale value because they die after 3 years, but if you bought one and it did then you probably would have a bad taste in your mouth and maybe write about it on the internet. The 3,000,0000 people who bought the same vehicle as you with 0 issues don't tend to say much about it though.
