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Getting the air supply, cutting capacity and portability right for your workshop is easier with some guidance up front, and that’s the kind of buying question the team at tecproducts.co.uk are set up to help with.

Cutting capacity is usually described in terms of clean cut and maximum cut thickness, and the two are worth distinguishing. Clean cut is the thickness a machine handles with a good edge finish and reasonable speed, while maximum cut is the thickest material the machine will get through at all, usually slower and with a rougher edge. Buying with your typical material thickness in mind, rather than the thickest job you might occasionally face, generally gives a better day-to-day result.

Portability and durability matter depending on how the table gets used. A shop building large frames or vehicle chassis needs a solid, well-supported table that won’t flex under load, while a mobile fabricator or someone working across multiple sites benefits more from a lighter, foldable design. Material and construction quality affect long-term flatness too, since a table that warps under heat from repeated welding stops being reliable exactly where it matters most.

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.

Helmet choice comes down to the mix of processes you run and how much you’re prepared to spend for extra sensors or tecproducts.co.uk a wider shade range, and it’s a straightforward conversation to have with a stockist that carries several options, including fabrication equipment supplier.

Getting the air supply, cutting capacity and portability right for your workshop is easier with some guidance up front, and that’s the kind of buying question the team at MIG welders UK are set up to help with.

The practical difference comes down to what a machine can draw and sustain. A single-phase supply has a ceiling on how much continuous power it can deliver before tripping breakers or overloading domestic wiring, which is why the highest-output welding and cutting equipment is frequently three-phase only, or offers noticeably better duty cycle performance when run on three-phase. For workshops without an existing three-phase supply, bringing one in usually means an electrician and, in some cases, an application to the local distribution network operator.

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