My goal as a hobbyist is to make structurally sound welds that are uniform enough on short distances (up to 6-8") to not be butt ugly. Given a narrow range of materials (1/16" to 1/8" aluminum now, then hopefully later stainless and mild steel), even the setup of the machine and the torch should not be that hard. There are optimal ranges and part of the joy and challenge of a new hobby is to discover them. Anyone uses published resources for that? I found the CK Worldwide technical specification brochure linked earlier, but was wondering if there is anything else out there you foundOscar wrote:I agree. The whole tempo thing is the icing on the cake when you've already nailed down every other parameter, and now the only thing to move onto is stacking evenly spaced dimes. Tempo will not hold the torch for you at the correct angle, it will not set-up the torch parts, it won't set the machine up for you, it won't steady your hand with respect to arc length, it will not move your filler rod hand to feed in the same exact amount of filler each time, it will not activate your forearm/wrist/hand muscles to rotate the torch on round tubing, it won't tilt your head that teensy weensy amount that you need to to have that just-right view of the puddle as you scoot along, and so on, and so on.
I have a hunch that TIG welding 1/8" aluminum is not a 5 years or 10,000 hours practice skill set and certainly feel I improved a lot from the feedback in this thread.