Its quite obvious that this guy is a humble genius. Keeping his lessons purely simple, at ground level & much fun to watch... Tony, you have taken UA-cam beyond the outer limits. I thank you!
Honestly, some of the best beginner welding videos on UA-cam. Not because they’re technical, but because they’re not. They’re informative, to the point, and so simple even I can understand them. Thanks Tony!
Yeah I agree. It's more like learning from a friend who is going to help me anticipate what's going to go wrong and how to avoid/handle it. I struck my first TIG arc yesterday, BTW. I owe a great deal of my success to you, Jody and ChuckE2009. Please keep it up!
This! I do not need all the technical info when all I need to do is repair my my lawnmower deck. Tony has a great way of explaining things that are humorous enough to keep you interested while keeping it simple enough to learn, but technical enough to understand what you are doing. Thank you TOT!
I haven't started welding yet, but this series has me convinced that mere mortals such as myself can do it. Adding a welder to my Christmas list.... Thanks for all the awesome info!
"it's like handwriting. You can improve your writing, change your style, but it takes practice". Thank you TOT, this is teaching. Every welder has their own "handwriting", and it may be legible and fine, but if you want calligraphy you're going to have to practice. Perfect analogy. That's why I love your videos. So glad AvE plugged your videos, I've been hooked for a while!
Usually the best teacher isn't the person who understood it intuitively, it's the person who struggled with the material the most but finally got through it. They might not know it as well, but they know why it's difficult to learn and how to overcome that. I don't know that you struggled with TIG welding, but, you're hitting all the points that no one else bothers to. Make whatever content is enjoyable for you to make, we're not the boss of you.
You're both onto a deep truth, I reckon. The old saying "Those who can, do; those who can't, teach" is not (as it might seem superficially) dismissive, but descriptive and insightful. I, as one example, am actually reasonably adept at TIG, and it seems to suit my temperament, whereas I took a hell of a long time to half-master stick welding - I'm sure I would be better at teaching the latter than the former (although I would have to achieve three-quarter mastery, before I would have enough to offer). It is a big topic, for sure. MIG welding aluminium I find particularly challenging because you have to keep moving so fast, and it's so hard to see the puddle. Here, I think, you *do* have to learn from someone with real mastery, because you can probably only learn by imitation and practice, rather than by deep reflection.
Gottenhimfella - I disagree. "Those that can, do; those that can't, teach" is absolutely an insult to most teachers, and should be, and is almost universally true. If you're good enough at something to get a good job in the field, you do that. If you're terrible at it and useless and can't get or hold a job doing it, you still have the credentials on paper, so schools will hire you for a lot less than you'd make if you were any good at it. The exception being people who hate field work and genuinely love to teach, but they're rare. Rarer still is someone who struggled with the material and then still chose to teach it instead of something that came easier to them. Very few people would struggle with Math for example, and then want to spend a career teaching it. But if they did, they'd probably be a great teacher. That versus a "Oh, you just do this, then this then this and you're done" teacher who can't grasp what it's like to not understand that.
Yeah you're probably right. Although personally, if I ever die in some other doofuses' giant cockup disaster that never should have happened, I hope somebody gets a laugh out of it as soon as possible.
It's hard to split hairs to that extent when it comes to UA-cam bon mots. One could also argue that Chernobyl and Fukushima didn't really have much to do with electronics.......
I 100% agree with the advice to just keep on going when you've dipped the tungsten when you're starting out. If you're dipping tungsten like that, not only will you go through tungsten quickly grinding it all the time, but it's not likely to make a huge difference in what is probably already a sucky weld to begin with. More important at that stage is to practice the consistency, rather than having to reset constantly. Bravo for having the guts to admit it.
Exactly this. Learning to keep a close arc without dipping the tungsten is mostly about muscle memory, and interrupting the practice to go grind the electrode or insert a fresh one is counterproductive unless you've really messed up the tungsten. Aluminum is worse this way, with dipping more likely to create a big Q-tip that requires a tungsten change, so mild steel may be better for practice. And I disagree with the attitude of the welding Puritans that feel there is some sort of immediate mandatory "walk of shame" to the grinder every time you dip the electrode. Who needs penance in a productive and enjoyable hobby!
Honestly these are the most informative videos on TIG basics. Not over explained, just what you need to know. I’ve already recognized some things I’ve been doing wrong by watching these and I’m keen as hell to get back practicing! Thank you again!
Tony do you understand the power you have over us? Whatever I am doing I stop to watch your videos. Thank you for hiding so much information under the entertainment and fun of your content.
Master of None You're totally right! Last video I just stopped right in the middle of traffic to watch. Thankfully this video came out while I'm in the hospital so I have something to watch while recovering from that accident. Totally worth it.
There I was, in the middle of traffic watching the previous video when Wham!, some bloke slams on brakes in front of me. I guess he never knew what hit him.... I certainly didn't see it coming... :-)
I went to the report function so I could report this TOT video, but it didn't have a button for excellent content and fantastic dry humor so I gave up.
Very informative! The puddle melts the filler. That simple comment has helped me more than you know. Trying to learn to tig and I’ve been struggling. Now I know why. Thanks Tony!
9:50 "the good kind of funny" That's you. I've seriously learned more about tig welding from this video than I ever knew before. Granted I don't know much but I've done mig for over 20 years and I've been interested in tig for a long time. Thank you.
Please make many, many more of these videos. Weldingtipsandtricks is great and all but it really nails it home when I get to watch my all-time favorite UA-cam-r walk through me through the TIG world. Thanks Tony!
As usual, and we are getting used to being spolied, your graphics and animation overlays on actual footage is brilliant. Demonstrating failure also really makes it clear rather than just talking about the issues with a lot of, "Don't do this or it will be bad."
frollard: And the vijeos are about basically the same thing. Sure, vastly different temperatures and materials, but it's all angry pixies melting stuff.
I've watched dozens of tig welding videos over the last year. This is literally the best one explaining how it works and what's happening while the torch is lit.
I've been struggling with knowing what to do with my filler hand. Best explanation I have seen as to what you are trying to do with the puddle/filler. And I've seen hundreds of TIG welding videos, and my welding hasn't improved. Now I have the confidence to go make more bad welds. Thanks!
I’ve watched this several times, though as an inept, hobby, MIG welder, it was “academic”. Then under the influence of this and other videos - mostly ToT and Colin Furze ones - I bought a TIG welder. Now I’m watching this video (several times) trying to extract the last drops of juice from it. Keep producing these videos, please! I certainly need help... and yes, my name is Les and I’m a tool junkie.. Les in UK
A little humour, some clear concise instruction and a complete lack of super technical BS. Best beginners TIG video ive seen. I think from now i shall call you Tony Exotic.
Tony, Thank you for your awesome videos. I don't think people know the amount of hassle and bull**it you go through to make these, and I wished I could send you patron love, but being broke blows.
Keep on it Tony, even professionals need a source of inspiration to keep improving. There are a few things we can all glean from looking at the fundamentals again. Add in the TOT experience and a cup of coffee and I dare say you've transcended mere media. Keep this up and you may actually start healing long forgotten weld coupons the world over.
You my man are one of the best teachers I have come across. I have learn more from you watching your channel than I have learnt through a lifetime of courses etc. where were you 35 years ago when I started welding and turning. I am only starting out with TIG but mig and stick I’ve almost mastered. Thanks for the brilliant lessons and keep them coming. I’ll be anxiously wait for them. You are the man.
Man, I just now found your channel! I'm learning TIG and this ONE video has condensed plenty of useful information into less than 13 minutes! The "I know everything" guys spend 90% of their videos telling us how great they are, but teach nothing. Thank you so much. Thanks for being real and keep the humor coming! Definitely subscribed and sharing your channel with my fellow rookie welders.
Where were you 30 years ago when I was trying to figure out how to tig miles of 2" ss winery transfer lines? These are the best explainers I've ever seen. Keep 'em coming.
Your section over arc length was really useful! I think its the biggest thing that is standing in my way of getting better welds. Seeing what an extended arc length looks like and what the direct results are is a huge help!
absolute best welding videos ever made. maybe not as technical as Jody but easily just as important with what your teaching and how you are teaching it. Thanks for sharing!!!!!!!
Jim Franzen--As a beginner I find your series both informative and easy to follow ! I hope you do more like these so us beginners can learn some tricks ! Thanks again
Unreal Tony, you are truly a master welder with cleaver wit along with the instructional material. Been Mig and Stick welding for 50 years, and pretty much got it down. Tig gives me fits for all the reasons you touched on. Please continue as you are a great teacher.
Tony, this was great tutorial. Ive had a tig for 5+ years and gave up on it due to poor welds. After your video I now know that my torch angle and electrode gap were way off. thanks for the video and keep them coming.
I don't have a welder yet but I want to learn how to well. This is the best video I've seen so far on what actually happens during the welding process. Please keep more of these videos coming.
Coming from the super-fancy clean weld world: Tungsten inclusions can also be a source of corrosion - so if you stub out too often you can have a prematurely corroding weld.
So I guess that is why we are frequently advised to grind out the weld wherever there is a touchdown, for high class work? I hadn't thought it through, but I guess it's the only plausible explanation.
A day with a TOT video is always great. You are such a great teacher. I've learned a great deal about the whys of TIG which really is helpful. Thank you as always.
You have a really good sense of humor and since your first TIG welding video im seriously thinking about dip my toe in TIG. Ops point six said no dipping. Well i Will start TIG welding, thats for sure
Thank you Tony, your approach to the video is very easy to understand 👍 I have learnt so much by you explaining the basics as opposed to other people who would just waffle on.
These are so far and above the best welding videos out there. Fast and to the point, but still extremely informative. SO glad I found these! God I wish my welding instructor were this informative and helpful. Thank you!
A thousand comments?! How is TOT gonna know how much I appreciated this latest installment? I'm hoping the next one covers aluminum, or stainless, or how to feed the filler rod. Really excellent!
"After all, you're probably not practicing your Tig welding on the cooling system of a nuclear reactor, right? You're not, *right?!"* *Hanford employees everywhere tug at their collars.*
In Finland we have this massice clusterfuck called Olkiluoto 3. An experimental nuclear plant that was supposed to go into full operation over a decade ago. Yet it's still uncertain when if ever it will actually be completed. It's already the world's second most expensive building project ever, right behind it's similiar French sister site. Those workers sure could have used some TOT welding lessons - maybe the plant would have already been operational by now..
Antti Heikkinen Do you know if that is going to be a Thorium breeder or a conventional reactor? I hear a few countries still want to try thorium breeders and I wouldn't mind waiting with that promise.
Olkiluoto 3 will be ”conventional” reactor capable of using uranium or mixed oxide fuel(MOX). If I understood correctly, it will be an improved Pressurized Water Reactor (PWR) with some fancy neutron reflector. They call it European Pressurized Reactor (EPR). In general, the whole project is pretty hilarious with all the delays and problems, with foreign labor, concrete, welding and what not. Not forgetting, all the legal proceedings following these. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olkiluoto_Nuclear_Power_Plant#Unit_3 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EPR_(nuclear_reactor)
I am just starting with TIG and have been doing the "watch lots of UA-cam" thing, but this is probably one of the best videos when it comes to explaining the dynamics of a weld puddle and the TIG process that I've seen. Keep making more!
Tony I can't tell you how much I have learnt from you.Great teacher and an inspiration. I was literrly holding the torch with my toes before this video,
I was so proud of myself to be able to repair my electric hair trimmer yesterday. All it needed was some replacement batteries (soldered in place). Watching you explain the magic of making things with your hands is spellbinding. Now I keep seeing things that need doing/making and I can only dream I had the tools and skill to be able to do or make them. Well, thanks to the likes of you at least I have an idea how it might be done! Sadly, I'm like the guy in "Breakfast Club" who thought "metal shop" would be easy and lost a grade because he couldn't make stuff properly. I'm terrible with my hands (I can barely write!) so I'm living out my maker fantasies by watching your workshop tutorials. Love them!
What Ron said Tony! Having just bought myself a tig, I have watched umpteen UA-cam vids from various tubers...and I learned more from this one than the umpteen combined! Thankyou so much! 👍🤣
I have a MIG welder I bought off Craigslist and used ONCE to test it. These videos are encouraging me to be on the lookout for a TIG rig as well. Keep these wonderfully informative videos coming! Also - naps are awesome.
I do a lot of trim edge welding at my job, and although the the welds are passable, they were not clean. I watched this and the very next day, my edge welding were as good as some that have been doing it for a long time! Thanks Tony!
These are great simply because they don't try and teach you everything to be the ultimate TIG welder. Instead you do a great job making it clear what you need to focus on to get to good enough for basic projects. Please keep going!
Watched this when it came out, because it's just so entertaining. This weekend I've been finally doing some TIG welding and had some success. Now I just need to refine it. Came back and rewatched these. Thanks so much ToT, I really appreciate all the effort you put into making these entertaining and informative. And I put my 13 yo daughter on the bridgeport this weekend, time for her to make some chips.
You know, I have no need or desire to learn how to weld, but I still enjoy these videos a very great deal. They're enjoyable, and I learn things that I didn't know before. Thanks for these.
First reaction: why is this guy wasting my time with comedic rambling? Second reaction: great information, well conveyed. I'm grateful for your efforts. Technical skill does not equate to teaching skill- thankfully, both are present here. Keep up the good work.
Love all your videos. Good sense of humour. Lots of information and you mention the basics which sometimes I don't know or don't understand until it is explained, which you do. Have learned a lot from watching your videos.
Your videos are the reason I got so excited to haul in 550CF of argon this weekend. I feel like I've got enough information to teach myself TIG. Thanks, Tony!
You are a natural teacher... you have a way of explaining content like I have never seen outstanding work my dude! Love your channel it's one of my favorites.
How about a video? He could make a video. That be ok with you? He is really good at it. So, we are agreed then, good. Have a cookie, go sit in the corner.
I've looked at a lot of instructional Vids. None actually dig down to the Basic fundamentals as clearly as does this one. Excellent plus - in my view. Thank you Sir!
Excellent video! Im just learning to tig and have watched all the beginner videos by all the main tig channels. You taught me more in 12minutes than all the hours combined. Thanks for giving me the start i needed!
Keep them coming, as an accomplished maker, home workshopper and an aspiring welder these videos are teaching me a lot. Watched a couple of times already and saved for later reference.
Just Brilliant! About a year ago I decided to learn to weld. I watched enough UA-cam to start with stick and soon realised that the were lots of pretty mediocre vids out there. Subsequently I probably watched 50% more vids than I needed to till I was able to find the right ones. Im now trying to learn TIG but now I know what not to watch and yours nail it! Thanks for the great learning experience.
Thanks Tony. I believe I have gleaned more valuable knowledge from this video than any others I have watched. I love the way you present it, and break it down into terms that I can understand.
You just helped explain one of the bigger issues I have been having. So much so I went, preped, and dropped a bead and I had an immediate result......that was good of course. Please make more videos.
Tony - that was absolutely brilliant! A fine, humorous, but information-packed delight. Keep 'em coming!
Ron Covell, I agree. I love so much the extra graphic that, to me, it's so useful to understand what otherwise will remain invisible.
Tony, a king has praised you..... Keep em coming!
Same here!
Thanks Ron, that means a lot!
I agree word by word with Ron Covell. Keep em coming Tony!!
No 2 minute long intro, no advertising, no bullshit talk before we see any action, no useless information... Now THIS is a helpful video! Thanks Tony
Its quite obvious that this guy is a humble genius. Keeping his lessons purely simple, at ground level & much fun to watch... Tony, you have taken UA-cam beyond the outer limits. I thank you!
Honestly, some of the best beginner welding videos on UA-cam. Not because they’re technical, but because they’re not. They’re informative, to the point, and so simple even I can understand them. Thanks Tony!
Yeah I agree. It's more like learning from a friend who is going to help me anticipate what's going to go wrong and how to avoid/handle it. I struck my first TIG arc yesterday, BTW. I owe a great deal of my success to you, Jody and ChuckE2009. Please keep it up!
This! I do not need all the technical info when all I need to do is repair my my lawnmower deck. Tony has a great way of explaining things that are humorous enough to keep you interested while keeping it simple enough to learn, but technical enough to understand what you are doing. Thank you TOT!
Yeah... It's kinda like my wife said about her skirt.. long enough to cover the important parts but short enough to keep you interested.
I haven't started welding yet, but this series has me convinced that mere mortals such as myself can do it. Adding a welder to my Christmas list.... Thanks for all the awesome info!
"it's like handwriting. You can improve your writing, change your style, but it takes practice". Thank you TOT, this is teaching. Every welder has their own "handwriting", and it may be legible and fine, but if you want calligraphy you're going to have to practice. Perfect analogy. That's why I love your videos. So glad AvE plugged your videos, I've been hooked for a while!
Usually the best teacher isn't the person who understood it intuitively, it's the person who struggled with the material the most but finally got through it. They might not know it as well, but they know why it's difficult to learn and how to overcome that. I don't know that you struggled with TIG welding, but, you're hitting all the points that no one else bothers to. Make whatever content is enjoyable for you to make, we're not the boss of you.
MattsAwesomeStuff
EXACTLY ! 😊
I think the best teacher is the one that had to work for it and earn it!
You're both onto a deep truth, I reckon. The old saying "Those who can, do; those who can't, teach" is not (as it might seem superficially) dismissive, but descriptive and insightful.
I, as one example, am actually reasonably adept at TIG, and it seems to suit my temperament, whereas I took a hell of a long time to half-master stick welding - I'm sure I would be better at teaching the latter than the former (although I would have to achieve three-quarter mastery, before I would have enough to offer).
It is a big topic, for sure.
MIG welding aluminium I find particularly challenging because you have to keep moving so fast, and it's so hard to see the puddle. Here, I think, you *do* have to learn from someone with real mastery, because you can probably only learn by imitation and practice, rather than by deep reflection.
Gottenhimfella - I disagree. "Those that can, do; those that can't, teach" is absolutely an insult to most teachers, and should be, and is almost universally true. If you're good enough at something to get a good job in the field, you do that. If you're terrible at it and useless and can't get or hold a job doing it, you still have the credentials on paper, so schools will hire you for a lot less than you'd make if you were any good at it. The exception being people who hate field work and genuinely love to teach, but they're rare. Rarer still is someone who struggled with the material and then still chose to teach it instead of something that came easier to them. Very few people would struggle with Math for example, and then want to spend a career teaching it. But if they did, they'd probably be a great teacher. That versus a "Oh, you just do this, then this then this and you're done" teacher who can't grasp what it's like to not understand that.
There a great deal of truth to that first line! _I know all too well_
Amen!
I didn't believe my ears when I heard TOT recommend on LTTs video. They couldn't have picked a better channel!
nice! which video?
@@ThisOldTony ua-cam.com/video/nwCtvpgwm5o/v-deo.html this one!
They did that?!
I only practice my electronics on the reactor core. I keep the welding practice to new, experimental pedestrian bridges over busy roads.
Too soon, man, too soon...
Yeah you're probably right. Although personally, if I ever die in some other doofuses' giant cockup disaster that never should have happened, I hope somebody gets a laugh out of it as soon as possible.
if you're referring to that bridge that collapsed recently, such a design was hardly experimental.
It's hard to split hairs to that extent when it comes to UA-cam bon mots. One could also argue that Chernobyl and Fukushima didn't really have much to do with electronics.......
i........in Miami.
I 100% agree with the advice to just keep on going when you've dipped the tungsten when you're starting out. If you're dipping tungsten like that, not only will you go through tungsten quickly grinding it all the time, but it's not likely to make a huge difference in what is probably already a sucky weld to begin with. More important at that stage is to practice the consistency, rather than having to reset constantly. Bravo for having the guts to admit it.
Exactly this. Learning to keep a close arc without dipping the tungsten is mostly about muscle memory, and interrupting the practice to go grind the electrode or insert a fresh one is counterproductive unless you've really messed up the tungsten. Aluminum is worse this way, with dipping more likely to create a big Q-tip that requires a tungsten change, so mild steel may be better for practice. And I disagree with the attitude of the welding Puritans that feel there is some sort of immediate mandatory "walk of shame" to the grinder every time you dip the electrode. Who needs penance in a productive and enjoyable hobby!
TIG stands for Tony Is Great.
this comparison and setting up of different conditions; talking your way through this - this is gold.
1. I love the codes
2. Not long enough (twss)
3. Please keep going on welding videos
4. They should be longer
5. More please
I agree
Honestly these are the most informative videos on TIG basics. Not over explained, just what you need to know. I’ve already recognized some things I’ve been doing wrong by watching these and I’m keen as hell to get back practicing! Thank you again!
Tony do you understand the power you have over us? Whatever I am doing I stop to watch your videos. Thank you for hiding so much information under the entertainment and fun of your content.
Master of None You're totally right! Last video I just stopped right in the middle of traffic to watch. Thankfully this video came out while I'm in the hospital so I have something to watch while recovering from that accident. Totally worth it.
Ron Erickson I always pull over. Never slam the brakes doing 70 to watch.
You stop?
There I was, in the middle of traffic watching the previous video when Wham!, some bloke slams on brakes in front of me. I guess he never knew what hit him.... I certainly didn't see it coming... :-)
Master of None he should go daily so we can get our fix lol
I am probably never going to be let anywhere near a TIG welder and yet I still find this video compelling. Tony really has the knack of presentation.
I went to the report function so I could report this TOT video, but it didn't have a button for excellent content and fantastic dry humor so I gave up.
Very informative! The puddle melts the filler. That simple comment has helped me more than you know. Trying to learn to tig and I’ve been struggling. Now I know why. Thanks Tony!
9:50 "the good kind of funny" That's you.
I've seriously learned more about tig welding from this video than I ever knew before. Granted I don't know much but I've done mig for over 20 years and I've been interested in tig for a long time. Thank you.
my pleasure Jeremy, thanks!
Please make many, many more of these videos. Weldingtipsandtricks is great and all but it really nails it home when I get to watch my all-time favorite UA-cam-r walk through me through the TIG world. Thanks Tony!
As usual, and we are getting used to being spolied, your graphics and animation overlays on actual footage is brilliant. Demonstrating failure also really makes it clear rather than just talking about the issues with a lot of, "Don't do this or it will be bad."
Hands down best beginner-level instructional Tig welding video on UA-cam.
A new This Old Tony video AND a new AvE video within 2 minutes of each other. What a great fucking sunday.
and the videos are within a second in length. Ave IS tony! OMFG.
I watched this 1st. U should know what I'm watching next lol
frollard: And the vijeos are about basically the same thing. Sure, vastly different temperatures and materials, but it's all angry pixies melting stuff.
Who is AvE :)
+Soren Hansen: I assume you're joking, but in case you're not, you go and subscribe right now to his vidjeos. They're skookum as fuck.
I've watched dozens of tig welding videos over the last year. This is literally the best one explaining how it works and what's happening while the torch is lit.
Keep them coming Tony! I have been tig welding for 45 years but this is excellent information from a different perspective.
ATB, Robin
I've been struggling with knowing what to do with my filler hand. Best explanation I have seen as to what you are trying to do with the puddle/filler. And I've seen hundreds of TIG welding videos, and my welding hasn't improved. Now I have the confidence to go make more bad welds. Thanks!
I’ve watched this several times, though as an inept, hobby, MIG welder, it was “academic”.
Then under the influence of this and other videos - mostly ToT and Colin Furze ones - I bought a TIG welder. Now I’m watching this video (several times) trying to extract the last drops of juice from it. Keep producing these videos, please! I certainly need help...
and yes, my name is Les and I’m a tool junkie.. Les in UK
A little humour, some clear concise instruction and a complete lack of super technical BS. Best beginners TIG video ive seen.
I think from now i shall call you Tony Exotic.
I don't own a TIG, nor will I ever, but yet I watch....continuously
Dan Nickerson I don't even weld, unless you count soldering. And machining... hah, nope ! Tony is just entertaining.
Thanks Dan!
Never say never..
This is 3 years later and it still applies for today, which is when I showed up, to learn. Thanks Tony. BTW, i like the humor, keeps me engaged.
Tony, Thank you for your awesome videos. I don't think people know the amount of hassle and bull**it you go through to make these, and I wished I could send you patron love, but being broke blows.
You have had better arc shots and better explanations than all of the welding channels here on UA-cam. Keep up the excellent work.
Keep on it Tony, even professionals need a source of inspiration to keep improving. There are a few things we can all glean from looking at the fundamentals again. Add in the TOT experience and a cup of coffee and I dare say you've transcended mere media. Keep this up and you may actually start healing long forgotten weld coupons the world over.
You my man are one of the best teachers I have come across. I have learn more from you watching your channel than I have learnt through a lifetime of courses etc. where were you 35 years ago when I started welding and turning. I am only starting out with TIG but mig and stick I’ve almost mastered. Thanks for the brilliant lessons and keep them coming. I’ll be anxiously wait for them. You are the man.
Man, I just now found your channel! I'm learning TIG and this ONE video has condensed plenty of useful information into less than 13 minutes! The "I know everything" guys spend 90% of their videos telling us how great they are, but teach nothing. Thank you so much. Thanks for being real and keep the humor coming! Definitely subscribed and sharing your channel with my fellow rookie welders.
By far, the BEST tig tutorial. Thank you TOT for taking the time to make these videos.
Shows all of the essential points to making tasty welds.
Thanks Greg!
Ridiculously helpful information.
Thanks Mike! ... and Lauren!
I concur 100% !
Where were you 30 years ago when I was trying to figure out how to tig miles of 2" ss winery transfer lines? These are the best explainers I've ever seen. Keep 'em coming.
Your section over arc length was really useful! I think its the biggest thing that is standing in my way of getting better welds. Seeing what an extended arc length looks like and what the direct results are is a huge help!
absolute best welding videos ever made. maybe not as technical as Jody but easily just as important with what your teaching and how you are teaching it. Thanks for sharing!!!!!!!
I see a new channel coming....Argon79 😊
Makin Sumthin From Nuthin This Old Aragon 🤔
Makin Sumthin From Nuthin ...😂😂😂
Genius!
Made me chuckle.
NYC ARC
Jim Franzen--As a beginner I find your series both informative and easy to follow ! I hope you do more like these so us beginners can learn some tricks ! Thanks again
Very very helpful more Please!
TOT, so many of the welding videos only show what goes right in the hands of a master. Thank you for showing the trouble shooting factors also!
"Staple of this channel - stating the obvious." Man, I love this so much
Unreal Tony, you are truly a master welder with cleaver wit along with the instructional material. Been Mig and Stick welding for 50 years, and pretty much got it down. Tig gives me fits for all the reasons you touched on. Please continue as you are a great teacher.
thanks Mike!
Do lathe / mill beginner videos.
Look through the playlists!
Go find the part squaring video ;)
Sharpening cutting and drill bits is a start in that direction.
Tony, this was great tutorial. Ive had a tig for 5+ years and gave up on it due to poor welds. After your video I now know that my torch angle and electrode gap were way off. thanks for the video and keep them coming.
I have welded on nuclear cooling systems, which is how I know this is great stuff.
I inspect welds on nuclear cooling systems, and i approve of this.
I can't match that, but I "die easily", so I approve of the skills and diligence of both the preceding posters.
I don't have a welder yet but I want to learn how to well. This is the best video I've seen so far on what actually happens during the welding process. Please keep more of these videos coming.
Coming from the super-fancy clean weld world: Tungsten inclusions can also be a source of corrosion - so if you stub out too often you can have a prematurely corroding weld.
So I guess that is why we are frequently advised to grind out the weld wherever there is a touchdown, for high class work? I hadn't thought it through, but I guess it's the only plausible explanation.
A day with a TOT video is always great. You are such a great teacher. I've learned a great deal about the whys of TIG which really is helpful. Thank you as always.
You have a really good sense of humor and since your first TIG welding video im seriously thinking about dip my toe in TIG. Ops point six said no dipping. Well i Will start TIG welding, thats for sure
As a budding, neophyte welder I very much like (and appreciate) these videos. Please keep them coming.
As always, thanks so much for sharing.
Steve
And here I always thought puddle control meant standing uphill when you're taking a piss! 😆
patrick farley almost.. It's being able to write your name in the snow...
And making sure you're aiming downwind
I was sure with all the "puddle control" emphasis there would be some remark about incontinence
and more advanced puddle control includes balancing the downhill angle with a cross wind while it is snowing!
I'm my house it's how fast I can grab a towel when I pull out of my wife.😁
Thank you Tony, your approach to the video is very easy to understand 👍 I have learnt so much by you explaining the basics as opposed to other people who would just waffle on.
Excellent, thank you. Now I don't have to consult with a Urologist about my puddle control problem.
Tom Q
That's why they make Depends ! 😊
Ken Gamble Tig sparks in your Depends only make the puddleing problem worse.
Just be sure it doesn't run down onto your sunday-best welding pants ;)
These are so far and above the best welding videos out there. Fast and to the point, but still extremely informative. SO glad I found these! God I wish my welding instructor were this informative and helpful. Thank you!
As a middle-aged man, I understand all too well the importance of puddle control. And I don't weld.
Or as a person with kidney stones.
Extremely, useful. Even other “in depth” videos don’t cover this like you do. Humor is a plus 👍🏽 Beginner welder here.
I am outraged not one of you videos were nominated for an Oscar, I am making some angry phone calls
A thousand comments?! How is TOT gonna know how much I appreciated this latest installment? I'm hoping the next one covers aluminum, or stainless, or how to feed the filler rod. Really excellent!
"After all, you're probably not practicing your Tig welding on the cooling system of a nuclear reactor, right? You're not, *right?!"*
*Hanford employees everywhere tug at their collars.*
Hanford. SMH.
"Comrade Ivanschanko, Tony says not to go on"- Pripyat c.1972 (probably).
In Finland we have this massice clusterfuck called Olkiluoto 3. An experimental nuclear plant that was supposed to go into full operation over a decade ago. Yet it's still uncertain when if ever it will actually be completed. It's already the world's second most expensive building project ever, right behind it's similiar French sister site. Those workers sure could have used some TOT welding lessons - maybe the plant would have already been operational by now..
Antti Heikkinen
Do you know if that is going to be a Thorium breeder or a conventional reactor? I hear a few countries still want to try thorium breeders and I wouldn't mind waiting with that promise.
Olkiluoto 3 will be ”conventional” reactor capable of using uranium or mixed oxide fuel(MOX). If I understood correctly, it will be an improved Pressurized Water Reactor (PWR) with some fancy neutron reflector. They call it European Pressurized Reactor (EPR). In general, the whole project is pretty hilarious with all the delays and problems, with foreign labor, concrete, welding and what not. Not forgetting, all the legal proceedings following these. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olkiluoto_Nuclear_Power_Plant#Unit_3
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EPR_(nuclear_reactor)
I am just starting with TIG and have been doing the "watch lots of UA-cam" thing, but this is probably one of the best videos when it comes to explaining the dynamics of a weld puddle and the TIG process that I've seen. Keep making more!
I remember Prince had a song about puddle control. Or maybe it was something else, but I've been married a long time now.
Tony I can't tell you how much I have learnt from you.Great teacher and an inspiration.
I was literrly holding the torch with my toes before this video,
Thanks! May actually now have the umph to pull that welder out from under my workbench.
I was so proud of myself to be able to repair my electric hair trimmer yesterday. All it needed was some replacement batteries (soldered in place). Watching you explain the magic of making things with your hands is spellbinding. Now I keep seeing things that need doing/making and I can only dream I had the tools and skill to be able to do or make them. Well, thanks to the likes of you at least I have an idea how it might be done! Sadly, I'm like the guy in "Breakfast Club" who thought "metal shop" would be easy and lost a grade because he couldn't make stuff properly. I'm terrible with my hands (I can barely write!) so I'm living out my maker fantasies by watching your workshop tutorials. Love them!
Puddle or Poodle?
I'm sure all the same rules apply. If your poodle isn't behaving, turn up the amps.
And thats the story why Tony is not allowed to have a dog anymore ;)
And thats the story why Tony is not allowed to have a dog anymore ;)
nasser pudel wird sicher auch zu was gut sein :)
( wet poodle is for sure also good for something )
i bet under the right amps, the poodle will make a puddle sooner or later...
What Ron said Tony! Having just bought myself a tig, I have watched umpteen UA-cam vids from various tubers...and I learned more from this one than the umpteen combined! Thankyou so much! 👍🤣
Was very happy to hear LTT call out This Old Tony... good call.
I have a MIG welder I bought off Craigslist and used ONCE to test it. These videos are encouraging me to be on the lookout for a TIG rig as well. Keep these wonderfully informative videos coming! Also - naps are awesome.
for all those that came here from LTT welcome, check out the rest of the channel its one of the best
I do a lot of trim edge welding at my job, and although the the welds are passable, they were not clean. I watched this and the very next day, my edge welding were as good as some that have been doing it for a long time! Thanks Tony!
You really are talented teacher...Mr.Tony😃
These are great simply because they don't try and teach you everything to be the ultimate TIG welder. Instead you do a great job making it clear what you need to focus on to get to good enough for basic projects. Please keep going!
better...I think I managed 4/6ths of a smile this time. I wonder what knowledge had to go for me to store this new info?
I managed two thirds.
Watched this when it came out, because it's just so entertaining. This weekend I've been finally doing some TIG welding and had some success. Now I just need to refine it. Came back and rewatched these. Thanks so much ToT, I really appreciate all the effort you put into making these entertaining and informative. And I put my 13 yo daughter on the bridgeport this weekend, time for her to make some chips.
"You're probably not practiciing your TIG welding on a nuclear reactor... I mean, you're not, right?"
Me: "Uuuuhhhh..."
I just left engineering school last winter and have had my first job this year. Your videos help me immensely with prototyping.
can you do a similar video series using mig?
You know, I have no need or desire to learn how to weld, but I still enjoy these videos a very great deal. They're enjoyable, and I learn things that I didn't know before. Thanks for these.
TIG again! Cool! Instead... only try to realize the truth. There is no filler! :D
First reaction: why is this guy wasting my time with comedic rambling? Second reaction: great information, well conveyed. I'm grateful for your efforts. Technical skill does not equate to teaching skill- thankfully, both are present here. Keep up the good work.
LTT just gave you a shout out bro, you may get flotte with new subs soon, i've sub to you like 2 years ago i think
Love all your videos. Good sense of humour. Lots of information and you mention the basics which sometimes I don't know or don't understand until it is explained, which you do. Have learned a lot from watching your videos.
“Saaaaallldering” 🤣
Its pronounced exactly as it’s spelt! Solder... not soder!
Your videos are the reason I got so excited to haul in 550CF of argon this weekend. I feel like I've got enough information to teach myself TIG. Thanks, Tony!
LMFAO, " ... Nice Sunday Welding pants ..."
You are a natural teacher... you have a way of explaining content like I have never seen outstanding work my dude! Love your channel it's one of my favorites.
Come on tony stop screwing around and make something.
Make something or not, either way these are entertaining and informative without being arrogant. I think that's difficult to do.
How about a video? He could make a video. That be ok with you? He is really good at it. So, we are agreed then, good. Have a cookie, go sit in the corner.
OFM IAT rekt him
I really wanted to see him weld that butt join on the thin material and no cheating with laying in on a big heat sink.
I've looked at a lot of instructional Vids. None actually dig down to the Basic fundamentals as clearly as does this one. Excellent plus - in my view. Thank you Sir!
You may say it's "intigmate" :D
Excellent video! Im just learning to tig and have watched all the beginner videos by all the main tig channels. You taught me more in 12minutes than all the hours combined. Thanks for giving me the start i needed!
You earnt a sub too.
You videos are informative, well edited and i enjoy your humour.
Cheers from Australia
Why am I watching this I don’t even own a TIG welder. ( I own a stick and mig)
Keep them coming, as an accomplished maker, home workshopper and an aspiring welder these videos are teaching me a lot. Watched a couple of times already and saved for later reference.
Just Brilliant!
About a year ago I decided to learn to weld. I watched enough UA-cam to start with stick and soon realised that the were lots of pretty mediocre vids out there. Subsequently I probably watched 50% more vids than I needed to till I was able to find the right ones.
Im now trying to learn TIG but now I know what not to watch and yours nail it!
Thanks for the great learning experience.
Thanks Tony.
I believe I have gleaned more valuable knowledge from this video than any others I have watched. I love the way you present it, and break it down into terms that I can understand.
Love your description of why long arcing causes so many problems. I'm a master of that one. Keep it up!
You just helped explain one of the bigger issues I have been having. So much so I went, preped, and dropped a bead and I had an immediate result......that was good of course. Please make more videos.