MIG, TIG or MMA: Choosing the Right Welding Process for Your Workshop

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Plasma cutting uses a jet of ionised gas, usually compressed air, forced through a nozzle at high speed and heated by an electric arc to a temperature hot enough to melt through electrically conductive metal. The molten material is then blown clear by the same jet, leaving a narrow, clean cut. Unlike oxy-fuel cutting, plasma works on any conductive metal, including stainless steel and aluminium, not just carbon steel. Hypertherm is the plasma cutting brand we get asked about most, and it’s worth understanding the basics before comparing specific units.

Ambient temperature and airflow around the machine also affect real-world performance. A welder working in a hot, poorly ventilated space, or one that’s been boxed in against a wall with no clearance for its cooling fan, will hit thermal cut-out sooner than the same machine used with proper clearance in a cooler environment. Keeping vents clear and giving the unit room to breathe protects both the duty cycle you paid for and the components inside.

For anyone starting out, talking through process, budget and set-up with people who deal with first-time buyers regularly is generally worth more than another hour of reading spec sheets, and that’s exactly the sort of conversation the advice line at Yorkshire welding equipment stockist is there for.

Cutting capacity is usually described in terms of clean cut and maximum cut thickness, and the two are worth distinguishing. Clean cut is the thickness a machine handles with a good edge finish and reasonable speed, while maximum cut is the thickest material the machine will get through at all, usually slower and with a rougher edge. Buying with your typical material thickness in mind, rather than the thickest job you might occasionally face, generally gives a better day-to-day result.

Keeping a stock of the right tungsten types, collets and gas lens sizes for the work you do avoids a lot of avoidable downtime, and it’s the sort of consumables range worth sourcing from a specialist supplier like Yorkshire welding equipment stockist.

Most people buying their first welder get stuck at the same fork in the road: MIG, TIG or MMA. Each process strikes an arc differently and suits a different type of work, so the right choice depends more on what you’ll be building than on which machine looks the most impressive on a shelf.

Tresa Schiller
Author: Tresa Schiller

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