DON'T laugh.
I took an art welding class. Learned the very basics of welding: safety, chopping, cutting, oxy-gas, stick, MIG over eight weekly classes.
It was cool, and would like to lean some more, but I DO NOT intent to become a certified professional welder, nor work in the field. But, I would like to make welds for myself that will hold together more than funky chicken lawn art.
I looked at the tech schools, and I am not throwing $7k for a degree I would never use, including their campus activity fees, parking fees, XYZ fees BS.
Question: having seen several welders on here, how could I go about learning to make good welds without paying for a degree? I have an oxy-gas setup & hand-me-down MIG, and was told to practice, practice, practice. Oxy-gas and MIG is what I would like to learn.
But, I believe, PERFECT practice makes perfect, not just making the same mistakes over and over. I'd like someone that knows welding to look at my welds, critique, and help me gain some competency. I'd gladly pay to learn the skill.
I am not looking to make pretty welds (though I appreciate them), but something that could hold up on a farm.
I am open to all honest, well meaning input. Thanks in advance.
I took an art welding class. Learned the very basics of welding: safety, chopping, cutting, oxy-gas, stick, MIG over eight weekly classes.
It was cool, and would like to lean some more, but I DO NOT intent to become a certified professional welder, nor work in the field. But, I would like to make welds for myself that will hold together more than funky chicken lawn art.
I looked at the tech schools, and I am not throwing $7k for a degree I would never use, including their campus activity fees, parking fees, XYZ fees BS.
Question: having seen several welders on here, how could I go about learning to make good welds without paying for a degree? I have an oxy-gas setup & hand-me-down MIG, and was told to practice, practice, practice. Oxy-gas and MIG is what I would like to learn.
But, I believe, PERFECT practice makes perfect, not just making the same mistakes over and over. I'd like someone that knows welding to look at my welds, critique, and help me gain some competency. I'd gladly pay to learn the skill.
I am not looking to make pretty welds (though I appreciate them), but something that could hold up on a farm.
I am open to all honest, well meaning input. Thanks in advance.
