Welding produces fume made up of fine particulates and gases, and the composition varies depending on the process, the filler material and any coatings on the base metal. Fume rises from the arc and, without adequate control, can build up in the breathing zone of anyone working nearby, which is why extraction is treated as a core part of workshop set-up rather than an optional extra.
Space and power supply are the other two practical constraints worth checking early. Confirming that a chosen machine will run comfortably from the electrical supply actually available in the workshop, and that there’s room to work safely around it with materials laid out, avoids the common mistake of buying a machine that then can’t be used the way it was intended.
Buying a first welder is easy to overthink. Rather than starting from a shortlist of machines, it helps to start from the work: 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.
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 fume extraction systems in Thirsk deal with exactly this kind of query on the advice line.
Our own TP Weld Tables range is designed and manufactured in-house in Yorkshire, cut on a fibre laser for tight tolerances, which is the kind of detail worth asking about wherever you’re sourcing a table, and you can see the full range via fume extraction systems.
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.