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Plasma Cutting Explained: What to Consider Before You Invest

The collet and collet body hold the tungsten in place and need to match its diameter exactly. A worn or incorrectly sized collet allows the tungsten to shift slightly during welding machines, which affects arc stability in ways that are easy to blame on technique when the actual cause is a consumable that needs replacing. CK Worldwide and Furick are two of the ranges we stock here, and these are inexpensive parts, but neglected ones cause a disproportionate amount of frustration at the torch.

Surface flatness and tolerance are the starting point, but fixturing is what turns a flat plate into a genuinely useful tool. Tables with a grid of holes or T-slots let you bolt down clamps, stops and jigs in repeatable positions, which speeds up repetitive fabrication and makes it far easier to hold parts square while tacking. A table without any fixturing options usually ends up needing extra clamps, magnets or improvised supports to achieve the same result.

Plasma cutting uses a jet of ionised gas, usually compressed air, forced through a nozzle at high speed and heated by an electric arc to a temperature hot enough to melt through electrically conductive metal. The molten material is then blown clear by the same jet, leaving a narrow, clean cut. Unlike oxy-fuel cutting, plasma works on any conductive metal, including stainless steel and aluminium, not just carbon steel. Hypertherm is the plasma cutting brand we get asked about most, and it’s worth understanding the basics before comparing specific units.

Switching speed, the time the filter takes to darken once it detects an arc, is worth checking against how you actually work rather than assuming faster is always better for every budget. For most general fabrication and repair work, a mid-range auto-darkening helmet with a sensible shade range covers the vast majority of jobs comfortably.

MIG (metal inert gas) welding feeds a continuous wire electrode through a gun, shielded by a gas supply, which makes it fast and relatively forgiving for general fabrication, sheet steel and repair work. Jasic’s MIG range is one of the more popular starting points here, covering entry-level compact units through to higher-output machines as work scales up. TIG (tungsten inert gas) uses a non-consumable tungsten electrode with a separate filler rod, giving a slower but tidier result that’s favoured for thinner materials, aluminium and stainless steel where finish quality matters. MMA, or stick welding, strikes an arc from a flux-coated electrode and needs no shielding gas at all, which makes it the most portable option and a common choice for outdoor or on-site work on thicker steel.

Abrasive discs look interchangeable on a shelf but perform very differently depending on what they’re made from and what they’re used on. Cutting discs are generally thin, designed to slice through material quickly with minimal heat build-up, while grinding discs are thicker and shaped to remove material from a surface or clean up a weld, rather than cut all the way through it.

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