Most domestic Tec Products UK properties are supplied with single-phase power, typically 230V, which is more than adequate for light-duty inverter welders used for hobby work, repairs and general fabrication. Three-phase supply, commonly 400V to 415V across three live conductors, is standard in industrial premises and delivers power more efficiently to heavier equipment, which is why higher-output welders and plasma cutters, including some Fronius and ESAB machines, are often offered in a three-phase version.
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.
Portability and power supply matter as much as the process itself. A stick welder will run from a generator or a domestic supply in places a gas bottle can’t easily follow, while MIG and TIG set-ups need a gas cylinder and, for anything beyond light-gauge work, a heavier electrical supply. Workshop layout, the materials you weld most often, and how frequently the machine needs to travel are all worth weighing up before settling on one process.
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.
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.
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.