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    Thread: Mig or tig

    1. #1
      Join Date
      Jul 2007
      Posts
      1

      Mig or tig

      I'm thinking to take a night welding class at the local votech. They have both mig and tig classes but I can't take both. I haven't welded since high school and then I only did arc welding.

      My Dad has both a mig and a tig welder sitting in his shop that he doesn't use all that much so equipment cost isn't really an issue for me.

      So my question is this... If cost isn't an option which is the better to learn?

      I'm kind of assuming that tig is the harder to do of the 2 and that if I can learn that with help that mig would be no problem. Is that correct?

      I'd like to hear the opinions of all the welding guru's out there.

      Thanks,



      Joe


    2. #2
      Join Date
      Jan 2006
      Location
      Oregon
      Posts
      1,773
      Country Flag: United States
      TIG is definitely the harder of the two...and the more versatile. MIG is typically faster and more convenient for laying down big welds or doing a bazillion little tack welds like when you're doing body work. I would take the TIG class and teach yourself how to MIG as the fundamentals of welding between the two are essentially the same.

    3. #3
      Join Date
      Jul 2007
      Location
      Austin, TX
      Posts
      48
      Country Flag: United States
      i wish i could tig. cost is what stopped me learning it..
      James

    4. #4
      Join Date
      Aug 2004
      Location
      Manteca, CA
      Posts
      383
      It really depends on what you are planning to do and which skill will actually be more useful to you.

      TIG is harder and therefore has more "mystique" to it, but from a practical standpoint, in my opinion, MIG is more versatile for the average car guy. TIG is a great skill and unquestionably can do stuff MIG cant, but alot of the stuff that the average car guy does can be done with the MIG.

      If it were me, I would do the MIG class first, get alot of that under my belt and then do the TIG class later.

    5. #5
      Join Date
      Mar 2005
      Location
      NY
      Posts
      1,097
      Quote Originally Posted by JPRain
      If cost isn't an option which is the better to learn?
      TIG. A monkey can teach itself MIG.
      The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.

    6. #6
      Join Date
      Jul 2005
      Posts
      100
      Mig class would be 2 nights?

      Tig class would be years. Once you learn Tig you hate to even pick up a mig. I have both, my mig has been at a buddies for 5 months or so and I have not missed it yet.
      Jeff
      '62 Nova Convert
      '63 Nova Hardtop
      '92 GMC Typhoon "Not Stock"
      '93 GMC Typhoon "Stock"

    7. #7
      Join Date
      May 2003
      Location
      St. Charles, Mo
      Posts
      424

      Tig or mig

      I'd go for the TIG. You can weld anything with the TIG and it's not that hard to learn. I have the Lincoln 175 square wave TIG and love it. They now have a pulse frequency feature to help weld thin gage metals. TIG welders also have a stick welding wand.

      I've used mine to weld steel, stainless, aluminum, and bronze. I've also used it to heat and shrink body panel when doing body work instead of using a torch. It's way more versitile than the MIG

      I also have a MIG but that was real easy to learn on my own probably not worth spending money on a class. In engineering school we had to take a manufacturing process class that included various welding techniques. The teacher only taught stick and gas welding. He figured if you could learn those two you could easily MIG weld. TIG welding isn't much different that the gas welding.

      Dennis

    8. #8
      Join Date
      Jul 2007
      Location
      CarCal
      Posts
      35
      Lincoln SquareWave....ahh...nice machine !!
      I should have picked a "CHEAPER" Hobby !!

    9. #9
      Join Date
      Sep 2006
      Location
      Southern Indiana
      Posts
      4,709
      Country Flag: United States
      Well as for me I like both.
      I would use a TIG to do all my fab work, on the flip side a mig can be picked up (with or with out gas shielding) and you can weld in a matter of minutes if not for a few hours of practice.
      I have an Astro Pneumatic 110 mig and right now it has 030 flux core.
      I have found a decently priced auto darkening helmet. Its and Arc One Black Hawk. $80 at the local Indiana Oxygen distributor.
      Its a solar powered sut works very well.
      I am looking around for my next welder,,,a TIG with frequency control(ie it has the square wave) The one I am looking at is a Thermadyne unit.
      TIG gives you enough control that you can weld the sharp edges of a pair of razor blades together and have no warpage and need no filler rod to do it.
      The neat thing about TIG is that if you get good you cna make smooth welds too. Most of the rippled welds are for the inspection people.
      I really dont care what most people say I have seen TIG welds that were able to be cleaned up with scotchbrite before that parts were painted and looked like a single piece,, so I know it can be done.
      Also practice makes perfect.
      Good Luck
      Lee Abel
      AFTERMARKET PERFORMANCE.




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