The practical difference comes down to what a machine can draw and sustain. A single-phase supply has a ceiling on how much continuous power it can deliver before tripping breakers or overloading domestic wiring, which is why the highest-output welding and cutting equipment is frequently three-phase only, or offers noticeably better duty cycle performance when run on three-phase. For workshops without an existing three-phase supply, bringing one in usually means an electrician and, in some cases, an application to the local distribution network operator.
The figure changes with output. Turn the amperage down and the duty cycle climbs, because the internal components are working less hard. This is why a welder can feel completely different in a busy production environment compared with occasional home workshop use: someone welding continuously through a shift needs a much higher duty cycle at their working amperage than someone doing short repair jobs a few times a week. It’s the kind of spec worth comparing properly across brands such as Kemppi and EWM, not just reading off the headline amperage figure.
Where the extraction point sits relative to the arc makes a bigger difference than most people expect. A fixed overhead hood can miss fume entirely if the work moves around the shop, whereas a flexible arm or on-torch extraction follows the job and tends to capture more consistently. Filters also need regular checking and replacement; a clogged filter doesn’t just reduce airflow, it can quietly reduce the whole system’s effectiveness long before anyone notices.
Most domestic UK properties are supplied with single-phase power, typically 230V, which is more than adequate for light-duty inverter welders used for hobby work, repairs and general fabrication. Three-phase supply, commonly 400V to 415V across three live conductors, is standard in industrial premises and delivers power more efficiently to heavier equipment, which is why higher-output welders and plasma cutters, including some Fronius and ESAB machines, are often offered in a three-phase version.
Space and power supply are the other two practical constraints worth checking early. Confirming that a chosen machine will run comfortably from the electrical supply actually available in the workshop, and that there’s room to work safely around it with materials laid out, avoids the common mistake of buying a machine that then can’t be used the way it was intended.
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 Tec Products is there for.