Any good books about welding?

   / Any good books about welding? #11  
Welding is something I never learned but always wanted to. My oldest son decided at the end of his 1st year of college last year that college was not for him. He started welding school a few months ago. I think he just started on tig this week. Now I've got a son who can take care of my welding needs for me. Even better. Should finish up with a master pipe welders certificate when he's finished up.
It's never too late to learn. When I got hired at my last job in 1987 I taught my mentor electrician how to gas weld. He was 2 years short of retirement. He taught me so much, I was happy to be able to teach him something in return. :)
 
   / Any good books about welding? #14  
recommend for him to take adult ed/ vocational welding classes. community college as well. that way he'll get feedback, something a book cannot do
 
   / Any good books about welding? #15  
Good information and techniques on a simple internet search. Vocational evening class really improved my welding skills. Made lifelong friendships with real welders that have enriched my fabrication abilities.
 
   / Any good books about welding? #16  
When I finished my electronics degrees at community college I took several welding classes: gas, arc and MIG. Well worth it. That was over 40 years ago. Just fabricated and welded up an implement for my machine yesterday with my little 110V flux core machine. The skills never go away. (y)
 
   / Any good books about welding?
  • Thread Starter
#17  
I found this book and thought it was more like I wanted to be geared to young people. FFA is very geared to young people and self sufficiency.
Thanks again for your suggestions. They got me more focused of what I was thinking.
Patrick
 

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   / Any good books about welding? #18  
Not quite an on-target reply to what you asked, but assuming your nephew is just starting out and has all the beginner questions - I have a couple of thoughts:

1) That FFA book sounds excellent for a youth starting out.

2) The modern generation is comfortable with learning from video and may prefer video to a textbook.

3) Some of the welding videos on YouTube are excellent beginner guides. Not all, there's a lot of junk nonsense posted by idiots, and some posters are egotistical characters who are on there more to persuade you of their greatness, rather than serving as good teachers. So look around to find the videos where you actually learn something useful.

The advantage of a video over a textbook is this is a skill where watching and understanding what is happening, is as important as the theoretical book learning needed to select materials, processes, settings etc. Similar to learning to drive, tennis, golf, anything physical.

Night school or vocational ed courses are great, recommended, if you are interested it tradesman level skill. But some of us simply need to repair or fabricate farm stuff, and that's where watching videos can be a good learning source.

I've come to respect 'Making mistakes with Greg'. He describes what he is doing using language a beginner can understand, and learn from. In his job he welds to maintain municipal equipment - snowplows, garbage trucks, structures, utility piping - and some fabrication from scratch. He can describe each of the modern welding processes and where to use each. He can be longwinded (like some of my posts :)), just skip ahead where needed.

I wish I had viewed his 'How to weld with 2011' when I got a $50 230-AC buzzbox 20+ years ago. After some practice I could do good solid work with it but learning on my own was like being dropped into a foreign country where I didn't know the language. That video would have made a big difference starting out, more valuable than anything I read at the time.

34Willys for your nephew, book learning is valuable to understand suitable processes and materials, but viewing videos demonstrating actual use are equally valuable. In particular if he isn't going to take courses.
 
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   / Any good books about welding? #19  
Lots of good welding books. Very basic old school book is the Forney welding manual. They call it stick welding for a reason:)
 

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