TXNinAZ
Well-known member
I finally bought a welder about 2 years ago after wanting to learn my whole adult life. I went with an import TIG machine to get started with- most challenging, but would allow me to learn how to weld aluminum, thin steel is easier, and of course it doubles as a decent stick machine. The next trouble was a surface to weld on. I didn't want to spend big on a table as there was no guarantee I'd learn to use the machine, so I bought a Harbor Freight table to start.
The other option was a homemade table that someone else made, but those are usually not great. Like this one. If this is your build, I apologize if I hurt your feelings, that's not my intention. But I can't imagine a worse way to build a table [emoji23]

After figuring out how to TIG with some minimal level of skill, I decided it was time to get a real table. I scour Craigslist daily for various things, so I started looking for table materials. I found a machine shop closing its doors that was selling some fixturing blocks they used on their boring jig that could be disassembled and allow me to use the tops for a tabletop.


I've got a good friend whose company is building a data center here in Phoenix and mentioned they had some extra steel I could have. I jumped on the offer and took home some good sized pieces of 6" hollow structural steel. Ultra super overkill, but free is free.

I needed to get them cut, but didn't yet have my bandsaw, so off to Metals supermarkets to pay their shop rate getting cuts.

Next was getting rid of the zinc. Welding galvanized steel is bad news for those unaware- the fumes from vaporizing the zinc will give you flu like symptoms for a day or two and in rare circumstances it can kill you. I started with a respirator and grinding disc, but that was slow as Christmas. Chemistry is usually the answer and HCl does the trick to strip hot dipped galvanization in a matter of minutes. It's not cheap, but a gallon from Home Depot got me started to see how well it would work.


About 20 minutes of grinding vs 5 minutes of sitting it in the muriatic acid and working on something else while it chooches. Time for a couple more gallons.

Time to stack and weld. The dimensions of the frame would allow full length for the fixture plates on top and a 2" gap between them for clamping.

About this point I realized I was not going to like the end result of my idea. It was not going to work out, but I went ahead and finished so I'd have something to use since the HF table was such junk.

The other option was a homemade table that someone else made, but those are usually not great. Like this one. If this is your build, I apologize if I hurt your feelings, that's not my intention. But I can't imagine a worse way to build a table [emoji23]

After figuring out how to TIG with some minimal level of skill, I decided it was time to get a real table. I scour Craigslist daily for various things, so I started looking for table materials. I found a machine shop closing its doors that was selling some fixturing blocks they used on their boring jig that could be disassembled and allow me to use the tops for a tabletop.


I've got a good friend whose company is building a data center here in Phoenix and mentioned they had some extra steel I could have. I jumped on the offer and took home some good sized pieces of 6" hollow structural steel. Ultra super overkill, but free is free.

I needed to get them cut, but didn't yet have my bandsaw, so off to Metals supermarkets to pay their shop rate getting cuts.

Next was getting rid of the zinc. Welding galvanized steel is bad news for those unaware- the fumes from vaporizing the zinc will give you flu like symptoms for a day or two and in rare circumstances it can kill you. I started with a respirator and grinding disc, but that was slow as Christmas. Chemistry is usually the answer and HCl does the trick to strip hot dipped galvanization in a matter of minutes. It's not cheap, but a gallon from Home Depot got me started to see how well it would work.


About 20 minutes of grinding vs 5 minutes of sitting it in the muriatic acid and working on something else while it chooches. Time for a couple more gallons.

Time to stack and weld. The dimensions of the frame would allow full length for the fixture plates on top and a 2" gap between them for clamping.

About this point I realized I was not going to like the end result of my idea. It was not going to work out, but I went ahead and finished so I'd have something to use since the HF table was such junk.

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