I guess how much work you need to do will be the deciding factor as to how much to spend for a plastic welder. For my limited use, I just use a cheap welbilt electric soldering iron. One of the pencil type you just plug in and let heat up. My first experience trying the plastic weld thingy was with the plastic fuel tank on my New Holland tractor. I had ran over a piece of reedbar drove into the ground and it punchered a 1/2in dia hole in the corner of the tank. I had already purchased one replacement tank for around $400 and didnt like the thoughts of haveing to pay that much again for another new tank. I made a trip to the local salvage yard and cut a peice of plastic out of a old car fuel tank to use as a filler. I then tried using a paint stripper heat gun to weld the filler to my tank, but either I couldnt get it hot enough, or I was using the wrong technique. Anyways, I had a small electric soldering iron and decided to try it. I seemed to be working, but I had problems getting enough of the area hot enough. I made a trip to Ace Hardware and bought a bigger soldering iron, more wattage, bigger tip, $14 I think. Anyways, this seemded to work perfect. I took my filler piece and stuck it in the hole and started running the soldering tip and filler together around the outside diameter of the hole and just kept going around until the hole was filled. This sealed the tank, no leaks and lasted for a couple of years until I sold the tractor. I have used the same system to weld up some frozen and busted watering cans in my chicken pens, I just used zip ties for filler material for the trays and plastic milk jugs for the bottles. I also welded up cracks in the plastic dash material of the tractor, you can sand the weld then paint the area and not even be able to tell it has been repaired. For welding cracks, I first run the hot tip edgeways along the crack and put a Vee groove almost all the way thru the material. I then take my filler and use the flat side of the tip to melt/weld the filler into the crack, moving the hot tip in a circular pattern to make sure I get a good bond between the filler and the piece being welded. Works for me.
Go on youtube and search for plastic welding, there are tons of videos showing how its done. That is where I first saw it done and what made me decide that it was something I could do without spending a fortune on equipment or need a ton of training to get-er-done