- Joined
- Oct 31, 2014
- Messages
- 444
If you haven't yet made the investment let me chime in here extolling the virtues of using CO2 as as newbie welder.
Benefits: Cheap!
Tradeoffs: As noted above, there's a bit of spatter with CO2 and the weld may not look like a journeyman did it.
Regarding spatter: Easy enough to avoid - either use an anti-spatter spray before welding or get one of Freight Harbor's pneumatic needle scalers and remove the spater with it after welding. Use the spray if you're not going to paint the joint (the spray is oil based and takes extra cleaning). The scaler is the bee's knees for removing the scritchies.
Using CO2 the weld may not be as pretty. Um, yeah - you're a newbie. Your first welds will look like a dog crawled onto your metal and crapped regardless of CO2 or bi- or tr- or quad- mixtures. Learn to weld and get your experience on the cheap with CO2 - and when you acquire the technique advance to the $$$ mixed gases.
Who knows, your first 20# CO2 tank may last a lifetime and give great results after you have honed your skills.
YMMV, have fun!
Stu
Benefits: Cheap!
Tradeoffs: As noted above, there's a bit of spatter with CO2 and the weld may not look like a journeyman did it.
Regarding spatter: Easy enough to avoid - either use an anti-spatter spray before welding or get one of Freight Harbor's pneumatic needle scalers and remove the spater with it after welding. Use the spray if you're not going to paint the joint (the spray is oil based and takes extra cleaning). The scaler is the bee's knees for removing the scritchies.
Using CO2 the weld may not be as pretty. Um, yeah - you're a newbie. Your first welds will look like a dog crawled onto your metal and crapped regardless of CO2 or bi- or tr- or quad- mixtures. Learn to weld and get your experience on the cheap with CO2 - and when you acquire the technique advance to the $$$ mixed gases.
Who knows, your first 20# CO2 tank may last a lifetime and give great results after you have honed your skills.
YMMV, have fun!
Stu