Hi, first of all let me introduce myself as a newbie. Newbie! LOL at my age I have decided (or should I say my classic car decided for me) it's time to learn how to weld.
I have read quite a lot of the post's on buying a welder and just about all the tutorials and with that information I went out to buy my first welder however, when I got to the shop I was talked out of the one that I wanted (mig 135) and into the one I have now a Clarke Mig 100EN Gas/no gas.
The man in the store told me this was a good machine for what I wanted to work on and that it was reduced due to now being discontinued.
Have a made a wise choice or should I have stuck to my guns?
I have read quite a lot of the post's on buying a welder and just about all the tutorials and with that information I went out to buy my first welder however, when I got to the shop I was talked out of the one that I wanted (mig 135) and into the one I have now a Clarke Mig 100EN Gas/no gas.
The man in the store told me this was a good machine for what I wanted to work on and that it was reduced due to now being discontinued.
Have a made a wise choice or should I have stuck to my guns?





the 100 will be fine for bodywork.
) I assume they well tell me what sort of regulator I need and the pressure to run it at.
Was only planning to do one small hole at the rear (bottom of the wing) but it turned out to be a rebuild of an inner wing section and I had to make a section of the wing the curled round the inside as well as the wheel arch! But all went well did in four sections and they all joined perfectly. I did start by just tacking, adding more tacks as they cooled, I ended op with what looed like the decoration around a cake but it worked well, the only thing was that it took more grinding to get it flat for finishing.