A welding table is easy to overlook when planning a workshop, yet a poor one undermines accuracy on every job that touches it. If the surface isn’t flat, nothing clamped or squared against it will be either, and small errors compound quickly on anything with multiple joints or angles.
Matching duty cycle to actual workload, rather than just chasing the highest amperage figure, is the difference between a machine that keeps up with the job and one that keeps tripping out halfway through it, and it’s a question worth raising with a supplier before you buy, such as welding tables UK.
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.
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, TEC Products 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.
Shade range and sensor count are the two specifications that matter most in daily use. A wider variable shade range lets one helmet cover a broader spread of processes and amperages, from low-amp TIG work through to higher-output MIG or MMA, without swapping cartridges. More sensors generally mean the filter is less likely to miss a low-angle arc or a strike caught at an awkward viewing angle, which matters most for TIG welding where the arc can be harder for a sensor to pick up cleanly.
Duty cycle is one of the most misunderstood figures on a welder’s spec sheet, yet it tells you more about real-world usability than the headline amperage does. It’s expressed as a percentage over a ten-minute period at a given output, so a machine rated at 30% duty cycle at its maximum amperage can run for three minutes out of every ten at that setting before it needs to rest and cool.