Greetings, First post so please be kind. How do I get started?
An old retired guy here wanting to learn how to weld. It would be all hobby stuff and possibly some hay equipment fixes, I know Miller has some dual voltage mig equipment.- But here is a problem - where to get training? The closest is a college 2 hours away. Are there good training videos available? As for power available my garage is on a 100 amp circuit and I am fairly good at wiring a new circuit.
Any help appreciated
Thanks
Keith
I "learned" how to weld way back in the early 1990's when I bought an HTP MIG welder because I had a car restoration I was working on and needed a way to weld on repair panels.
I basically pulled the thing out of the box, grabbed some steel - and started figuring out how to get the thing to work the way I wanted it to. The manual was pretty good and the rest I picked up from some welding books. There was no internet back then.
Then a few years later I picked up a Miller EconoTig TIG welder - because I wanted to weld up a rollcage. I took some scrap steel and sat down and started welding until I got to what I thought was sufficiently good looking welds to move forward with the rollcage.
There's a lot more resources available online now - I can't say it's always a good idea to purely use internet videos (because a lot of it is based on opinion), but then again if you go to a class - you're subject to the teacher's opinions there as well.
If it was me - I would pick up a welder and some steel scraps, and just sit down and see what you can do. If things aren't working - go research what the problem might be and see if the solutions offered up fix the issue. That's at least a good place to start.
IMHO in person schooling is probably good for having the teacher "see" what you might be doing wrong with torch angle, technique , setup ..... things like that. But other more technical issues can probably be solved just as effectively by researching on the internet.
Probably local technical schools would probably be the best place to check first for welding classes.