I took the five-hour intensive MIG welding class from Rusty at Hazard Factory on Saturday. The bullet points:
Had a nice evening at the Merc afterward with L, wife of a cow-orker whom I met at the holiday party, and Emily Szarek, designer and sole proprietress of Vexx Wear. She's a big fan of
cupcake_goth; you two should talk amongst yourselves. Yes, of course Emily's cute. She's also straight. Now hush.
gfish was right that the metallurgy part is a little too elementary. If you have an engineering background, you can skip that part.
- When Rusty says to dress for the outdoors, he means it. Goddamn Raynaud's syndrome.
- The hardest part for me by far was getting the window in my welding helmet in the right place after I nodded it down to start welding. I really need practice at that.
- I welded at least three pieces to the tables; see previous item about being sporadically blind.
- The gloves I was using were also the heaviest & cruddiest in the class, and therefore the stiffest. I kept pulling the trigger by accident, which on a MIG welder means you then have to snip off the excess wire you just fed out. Once I pulled the trigger while my wire was near some metal and started welding without my helmet in place. Here's hoping I didn't permanently burn a hole in my retinas.
- I want to practice more with a MIG welder, but that means renting equipment unless somebody's willing to let me bum time on theirs. [*fluttery eyelashes*]
- Speaking of equipment, Rusty volunteered that he found a 110V stick welder too hard to use to be useful. Guess who owns a 110V stick welder that's gathering dust.
Had a nice evening at the Merc afterward with L, wife of a cow-orker whom I met at the holiday party, and Emily Szarek, designer and sole proprietress of Vexx Wear. She's a big fan of
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