The best thing an inexperienced welder can do is take a course from a community college or welder training facility to learn the advantages/disadvantages of different rods(electrodes) and machines. The next best thing they can do is practice, practice, practice and make sure they are getting the right information to help them. You have to have some idea of what you're doing before jumping right in or it's just a recipe for disaster. Getting a link to incorrect information does the opposite of helping them as does getting mis-information. Just curious, did you go through an apprenticeship or just work somewhere welding? You would think a 20 year welder would know that "braising" is what you do to meat and brazing is way to join metal. When someone posts something that obvious it tends to make make their other advice suspect.
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Today's Featured Article - Old Time Threshing - by Anthony West. A lovely harvest evening late September 1947, I was a school boy, like all school boys I loved harvest time. The golden corn ripens well and early, the stoking, stacking,.... the drawing in with the tractors and trailers and a few buck rakes thrown in, and possibly a heavy horse. It would be a great day for the collies and the terrier dogs, rats and mice would be at the bottom of the stacks so the dogs, would have a busy time hunting and killing, all the corn was gathered and ricked in what we c
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