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.
Ambient temperature and airflow around the machine also affect real-world performance. A welder working in a hot, poorly ventilated space, or one that’s been boxed in against a wall with no clearance for its cooling fan, will hit thermal cut-out sooner than the same machine used with proper clearance in a cooler environment. Keeping vents clear and giving the unit room to breathe protects both the duty cycle you paid for and the components inside.
Flap discs sit between cutting and grinding in terms of use, combining overlapping abrasive flaps to blend welds, remove coatings and finish surfaces with more control than a solid grinding disc. Every disc also carries a maximum operating speed printed on it by the manufacturer, and checking this against your angle grinder’s rated speed is a basic habit worth building into every new batch you open.
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 welding helmets and PPE.
Most people buying their first welder get stuck at the same fork in the road: MIG, TIG or MMA. Each process strikes an arc differently and suits a different type of work, so the right choice depends more on what you’ll be building than on which machine looks the most impressive on a shelf.
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.