Getting the right disc for the material and finish you’re after saves both abrasives and time, and it’s worth checking your current selection against the job list with a supplier who stocks a full abrasives range, such as tecproducts.co.uk.
Portability and power supply matter as much as the process itself. A stick welder will run from a generator or a domestic supply in places a gas bottle can’t easily follow, while MIG and TIG set-ups need a gas cylinder and, for anything beyond light-gauge work, a heavier electrical supply. Workshop layout, the materials you weld most often, and how frequently the machine needs to travel are all worth weighing up before settling on one process.
TIG welding relies on a handful of small consumable parts inside the torch that have an outsized effect on how the arc behaves. The tungsten electrode itself doesn’t melt into the weld; it simply carries the arc, and different tungsten types, distinguished by their alloying elements, suit different current types and materials. Getting the wrong tungsten for the job typically shows up as arc wander or poor arc starts long before it shows up anywhere else.
Our own TP Weld Tables range is designed and manufactured in-house in Yorkshire, cut on a fibre laser for tight tolerances, which is the kind of detail worth asking about wherever you’re sourcing a table, and you can see the full range via tecproducts.co.uk.
Before choosing a machine, it’s worth checking what your workshop’s consumer unit and incoming supply can actually handle, not just what socket is nearest the bench. Buying a three-phase-only machine for a single-phase workshop, or underestimating the load a higher-output single-phase welder places on existing wiring, are both avoidable problems with a bit of checking upfront.
A welding table is easy to overlook when planning a workshop, yet a poor one undermines accuracy on every job that touches it. If the surface isn’t flat, nothing clamped or squared against it will be either, and small errors compound quickly on anything with multiple joints or angles.