Thanks for all of the tips and advice. I'm currently limited to a vintage Lincoln arc welder also referred to as "tombstone" or "buzzbox". It will have to make do till I'm able to afford a MIG or TIG unit.
My garage currently has a dedicated 50A 230V circuit for heavy duty equipment. Anyone know what size welder I will be limited to with my power setup. Also, I'm thinking of initially getting a MIG welder, possibly a TIG later on, so are there any welding hobby jobs that a MIG welder can't do that a TIG can?
Hi Joji,
I started off with an arc welder and moved to a 130 amp MIG a few years later because I wanted to weld aluminium. MIG can do that easily provided you pick the right gas; I used Argon and still do as I can use it for Al/SS/CS because even if it's not ideal it works well enough across the range. The MIG unit has welded car body panel steel, thin stainless and up to 3mm Al. For thicker mild steel I prefer arc welding, it's easy to get lack of fusion with low powered MIG units on thick steel.
TIG can do all of the above but if you want to weld Al with TIG you need an AC/DC set. You can weld Al on DC but it's not as easy and the usual weld procedures are for AC.
An inverter TIG unit as mentioned by FranV8 will also do arc welding so if you only pick one welder, an AC/DC TIG set is the most flexible. My set is a 160 amp RTech branded Chinese (?) welder and it runs happily of a 13amp plug (32amp RCD supply) so your 50 amp supply will be plenty. The 130amp MIG and 150amp Arc welding sets also work off 13 amp plugs, you will only need higher power supply if you want to weld thick steel. (I'm guessing maybe 200 amp sets ?)
There's a lot said for and against the Chinese units and I don't know enough about the designs to comment one way or another. The critical thing is your supplier and if they stock replacement parts that you'll hopefully never need but just might. R-Tech in the UK are known for customer support and that's why they got my business - you will have similar people over your side of the pond and I'd urge you to look at the supplier & not just the price tag !
I'll also be controversial and try to push you towards TIG rather than MIG. MIG is great for car bodywork and generally speaking you can knock out welds within an hour of getting your new set home. BUT...... these days I don't use it very much.
For example, I originally made the Europa petrol tanks with the MIG set and they have 1/4" tube outlets which took me ages to get that leak-free because the welding wire comes out too fast for me to do such delicate work. There's a limit to how much you can slow it down and the process still work, unlike TIG welding where you have far better control over current and wire addition. Another example in a different metal, those caliper brackets were made using the arc welder. I could have used MIG but was concerned over lack of root fusion on thick steel.
So for your average hobbyist, an AC/DC TIG set with Argon gas can weld pretty much anything you're likely to need. If you decide Al isn't going to feature on your wish list then a DC TIG will be significantly cheaper to buy. I predict if you buy a MIG set then you won't use it after you've got a TIG welder.......
Brian