welding and education, schools of thought |
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welding and education, schools of thought |
golden2.0 |
Dec 14 2015, 11:59 PM
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#1
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 17 Joined: 26-April 15 From: Virginia Member No.: 18,670 Region Association: South East States |
So I just recently purchased a car and after reading all the rebuild posts I have decided to strip the car down and (with the blessing from my wife) to take a crash course in welding. If I am going to rebuild, I want to do it correctly. I found a school with small class sizes but they told me that they concentrate on mainly stick welding (which I have done before). The question I have is what is the best method of welding these cars back together? Seems that TIG is preferred. My past large welding project was using brass rods and a torch to rebuild a 67' mustang, I don't think I want to use that process for this current project since it requires a ton of heat...it worked, but it wasn't pretty.
Any in-site on type of welding to learn would great. I want to make sure I ask the right questions from the school before I sign up for their classes. Don't want to waste money on school if it is not going to specifically help with my project. I figure I can have the car done by the time my little boy is 16. He is almost 2 now. |
BeatNavy |
Dec 15 2015, 03:36 AM
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#2
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Certified Professional Scapegoat Group: Members Posts: 2,924 Joined: 26-February 14 From: Easton, MD Member No.: 17,042 Region Association: MidAtlantic Region |
(IMG:style_emoticons/default/agree.gif) 100%. Stick welding is more for construction projects (e.g., pipe, I-beams, etc.). For home welding it is sufficient and perfectly good to get what Andrew recommends. I have one of those 110v Hobart Handler setups that works very well for any project I have. It took a fair amount of practice to get up the learning curve, and nothing beats experience of practicing on 16/18 ga sheet metal (at odd angles, bad lighting, etc.).
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