If you're thinking about getting into welding,
you have to ask yourself what type of welding you are interested in
doing before you buy any equipment. Most welding machines are capable of
making most joints in metal, but they are all better at some jobs than
others. By far the most universal welder is a MIG. You can use a MIG
welder to weld thin gauge sheet metal or heavy steel pipe. A pro can
make beautiful, smooth, deep welds with a MIG welder, but an amateur can
get an adequate weld out of the machine, too. They are simple enough to
use that you can plug the thing in, crank up the gas shield and start
doing some welding -- ok, that's simplifying things more than a little
bit, but the fact is MIG welders these days aren't tough to jump into at
all.
So, what does MIG mean anyway? Before we get there, let's talk about arc
welders. Arc welders use high voltage electricity to generate enough
heat to make a weld. There are different types of arc welders -- stick, TIG,
MIG -- but the difference between them is not in the electricity they
use or how they use it, but in the other element common to arc welders, a
gas shield. The gas shield can be created by a flux that releases gas
due to a chemical reaction, or by a cloud of gas released from a tank
connected to the welder. In the case of a MIG welder, the tank is filled
with a mixture named Metal Inert Gas by the industry. The gas recipe
varies, but the name indicates that none of them will react with metal
and add any contaminants to your weld. This gas is pumped through your
welding cable from that metal tank you had to lease or buy. It comes out
of the same nozzle your welding wire is fed through so it literally
creates a protective cloud around the arc as you're welding.
A MIG welder is also a wire-feed type welder. The metal that it uses to
create the weld material is held on a spool inside the welder. The type
of material it uses depends on what type of metals you're joining, but
it's always a metallic wire. For beginners, or for welders who need
ultimate portability, some welding wire contains flux inside it,
eliminating the need for a separate tank of welding gas. This works, but
is inferior to a proper gas setup. The wire is fed through the nozzle
coming out as you pull the trigger. The welding wire itself completes
the arc that was started when you clamped the other electrode to your
welding project.
A MIG welder has a number of different heat settings which allow you to
set the machine to just the right power to get a deep weld with good
penetration, but not so much power that you burn a whole in your
project. Don't worry if you do this a few times before you get things
right. Even seasoned welders are suprised from time to time and end up
having to make last minute adjustments to their heat settings. There is
also an adjustment to the feed rate of your wire. This will vary by
project and equipment, but as you get to know your usual jobs and your
welding machine, you'll fine tune your feed rate. It's always a good
idea to do a test bead on some scrap metal before you start working on
your valuable project. A properly set up machine that is welding clean
metal will sound like bacon sizzling in a pan. Getting the heat and feed
settings right before the real job is in front of you can save lots of
time and money.
Read more: http://autorepair.about.com/od/glossary/a/How-Does-A-Mig-Welder-Work.htm
By far the most universal welder is a MIG. You can use a MIG welder to weld thin gauge sheet metal or heavy steel pipe. A pro can make ... weldermig.blogspot.com
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