TIG Welders — Reviews & Buying Guide

TIG welder reviews and buying guide. AC/DC machines for aluminum and steel, DC-only units for steel and stainless, pulse TIG, and budget vs professional comparisons with real specs.

TIG welders split into two main categories: AC/DC machines that handle aluminum plus steel, and DC-only machines for steel, stainless, and chromoly. Within those categories, price ranges run from $400 budget inverters to $8,000+ industrial units. The differences come down to arc characteristics, AC waveform control, pulse capability, and duty cycle.

AC/DC vs. DC-Only

AC/DC TIG welders are the versatile choice. AC mode welds aluminum and magnesium. DC mode handles everything else: mild steel, stainless, chromoly, titanium, copper, and nickel alloys. If there’s any chance you’ll weld aluminum, buy AC/DC.

DC-only TIG welders are simpler and cheaper. A 200A DC TIG inverter runs $300-700 depending on the brand. These machines handle all ferrous metals and most non-ferrous metals except aluminum and magnesium. If your work is exclusively steel and stainless, DC-only makes sense.

Features That Actually Matter

AC frequency control adjusts the arc cone width on aluminum. Higher frequency (80-200+ Hz) tightens the arc for better control in tight joints. Lower frequency (40-60 Hz) gives a wider, softer puddle for outside corners and fillets. This feature separates mid-range machines from basic units.

AC balance controls the ratio of cleaning (EP) to penetration (EN). More EN means more penetration and a narrower cleaning zone. More EP cleans oxides aggressively but heats the tungsten faster. Adjustable balance from 60-80% EN is standard on good machines.

Pulse adds heat control that manual pedal work alone can’t match. At minimum, look for adjustable peak current, background current, and pulse frequency. High-frequency pulse (100+ PPS) is a genuine advantage for thin aluminum and stainless tube work.

High-frequency start initiates the arc without touching the tungsten to the workpiece, keeping the tungsten clean and avoiding contamination. Lift-arc start is the budget alternative. It works but contaminates the tungsten tip on every start.

Articles in This Section

Detailed reviews, brand comparisons, and spec breakdowns for TIG welders from Lincoln, Miller, ESAB, Everlast, YesWelder, AHP, and others. Organized by price point and application.

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