Lelandwelds
Silver Member
At first glance,a lot of the opinions posted seem contradictory but in reality most aren't. I'm fairly new to welding and here's my take so far. Buy a name brand machine,buy 240 volt or dual 120/240,get the most amps you can afford but at least 175. You can't buy parts for HF and other low end machines. While it's true good looking mig welds can be weak,mig can make as strong of welds as stick. Try breaking pratice welds if there's any doubt. Newbies will do themselves a favor starting off with flat & horizonal wire rather than the popular all position wires. After getting comfortable doing flat & horiz,go with all position if you occasionally need to do vert or overhead. Rather than striving for stack-o-dime appearance,try eliminating worm holes, inclusions,undercut,lack of penetration and burn through. I have been happy with my Lincoln Pro-Mig 180 doing body panels,pipe H fence braces and in between.
You may be right. People are probably more similiar whether the subject is politics, religion, welding, or other controversial subjects.
Welders are supposed to come in blue but Lincoln is a major brand. The green tractor and Snap-On guys can get difficult and excited too.
Stack of dimes is largely a function of flux type. (It's gas selection and spray vs short circuit for mig.) Pin holes and worm tracks are often dirty base metal or poor condition of flux. Wagon tracks, under cutting, bead profile errors, and penetration problems are operator error.
I really dis like third rate equipment. I firmly believe professional grade equipment and supplies get called that for a reason. I know money by definition is treasure but who plans from the start to perform poorly and struggle while you do it?
Also, I have found there are few things the factory and "professionals " can do that a motivated individual can not.