Joe
There are a few different styles of "weave" bead when a person welds, depending on type of material, thickness, weld method used, etc. I generally don't zig-zag in my welds in a sawtooth pattern, but with stick use a "u" shape, alternating back and forth between each piece, and use a spiral pattern with MIG. Like was pointed out earlier, welding is partly an art and partly a science. Nothing beats practice and experimentation with your equipment. Even 2 welders coming off the same assembly line may have subtle differences in their behavior - we had 2 Millers at the school that required slightly different wire speeds for the same thickness of material.
As for the bottle, a home welder would not do badly with a smaller bottle. Our MIG machines were used for about 4-5 hours a day each, and we exchanged the lease cylinders (can't rember the official size designation, but they're the ~5ft tall ones) at about 3-4 weeks. Unless you have a home-based fab business, you should be ok with a smaller bottle.
At some point I wouldn't mind a welder at home, but I can use the one at work all I want - and so I can't really justify the expense at this time. When I do though, I'll be looking at something like a good used Miller 185. If it holds up that well under the use of high school students, I certainly can't hurt it!
There are a few different styles of "weave" bead when a person welds, depending on type of material, thickness, weld method used, etc. I generally don't zig-zag in my welds in a sawtooth pattern, but with stick use a "u" shape, alternating back and forth between each piece, and use a spiral pattern with MIG. Like was pointed out earlier, welding is partly an art and partly a science. Nothing beats practice and experimentation with your equipment. Even 2 welders coming off the same assembly line may have subtle differences in their behavior - we had 2 Millers at the school that required slightly different wire speeds for the same thickness of material.
As for the bottle, a home welder would not do badly with a smaller bottle. Our MIG machines were used for about 4-5 hours a day each, and we exchanged the lease cylinders (can't rember the official size designation, but they're the ~5ft tall ones) at about 3-4 weeks. Unless you have a home-based fab business, you should be ok with a smaller bottle.
At some point I wouldn't mind a welder at home, but I can use the one at work all I want - and so I can't really justify the expense at this time. When I do though, I'll be looking at something like a good used Miller 185. If it holds up that well under the use of high school students, I certainly can't hurt it!