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.
If you’re still working out which process fits your workload, it helps to talk it through with people who field these questions every day rather than guess from a spec sheet, and the team behind welding helmets and PPE in Thirsk deal with exactly this kind of query on the advice line.
A reliable, adequately sized compressed air supply is the part most first-time buyers underestimate. Undersized or contaminated air, whether from moisture, oil or an undersized compressor, is one of the most common causes of poor cut quality and shortened consumable life, so it’s worth checking a machine’s air requirements against what your compressor can actually deliver before you buy, not after.
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.
Keeping a stock of the right tungsten types, collets and gas lens sizes for the work you do avoids a lot of avoidable downtime, and it’s the sort of consumables range worth sourcing from a specialist supplier like TIG welding equipment.
Buying a first welder is easy to overthink. Rather than starting from a shortlist of machines, it helps to start from the work: TEC Products what materials, what thickness, and how much of it will be done indoors versus outside or on-site. That single question narrows the choice between MIG, TIG and MMA far more usefully than comparing spec sheets in isolation, whether you end up looking at a Jasic entry-level MIG package or something further up the range.