UngaWunga wrote:Most local VoTech schools offer a welding class. I took one a few years ago. Good exposure to different machines and methods.
Taking a class from the local tech college would be a very good way to go. My dad looked into it and it was about $400 for the class here.
I look forward to the reposes here. I'm a poor welder but I really enjoy doing it.
I had watched my dad and grandpa weld for years when I was a kid. When I was 15 I wrecked my XR500 and ripped the muffler off. My grandpa wouldn't weld it back together because the muffler was too thin to weld with his old Lincoln "buzz box" stick welder. So I waited till he wasn't home, rode the bike over to his place and welded it myself. I blew hole after hole and kept slobbering weld, mostly slag, over the holes till the thing stayed together. Actually it is still intact 15 years later. I've never had any instruction and it shows but I can make a ok weld with either stick, mig or gas.
I only recently started welding with gas had I learned everything I know from youtube

I actually really enjoy gas welding and that will likely be the system I use for my BH project. We just borrowed a TIG machine from a friend and I'm getting so sick of sharpening the tungsten because my hand just isn't steady enough. I'm sure with more practice I'd figure it out but I'm losing motivation.
My advice, which isn't worth anything, is to get either a TIG or a gas setup, because that is what you will use on 4130, and practice, practice, practice. I'm using a gas rig I inherited from my grandpa; it is a really old Smith but it works. The TIG we are using is a Thermal Arc. The guy we borrowed it from is a perfectionist and is certified to weld on nuclear systems; if it is good enough for him it is good enough for me. What I wanted in a TIG was at least "lift start", you don't want to scratch start on a airframe, would hold an arc at 10amps with a max of 100amps and a foot control.