I've been hobby welding for years, and it is my favourite hobby, and can do Arc, MIG and TIG (a bit). The welding method used depends upon what you want to fabricate. I've made a lot of structural things (hydraulic galloping treadmill for horses, farm equipment, large barn doors etc.) as well as repaired all manner of stuff and found Arc to be by far and away the best method for these things, because you can get real penetration of the weld into the metal, but it is unsuitable for thin tube and sheet metals, where MIG is the better method. For the bigger sizes of welding rods used with Arc welders, you are pushing a domestic power supply to the limits though. I've used MIG for welding stainless steel exhaust modification and thin sheet and tubes for sculptures etc. and occasionally use it for the odd aluminium repair, with untidy results but effective joints. I don't have TIG equipment and did a course for it years ago but it gives the nicest result for parts which are on view, such as bike frames, and aluminium constructions etc.
As said by others, practice, practice, practice is the only way to become good at welding. Buy a big angle grinder with cutting and grinding disks and some scrap plate/sheet, rod and box section and with your imagination you can fabricate absolutely anything, and your unsuccessful work can be consider to be sculpture for your garden!
Make sure you always protect your eyes with a self-darkening mask otherwise you'll get "arc eye" and always protect your skin with suitable clothing otherwise you'll get "sun"-burn on exposed skin. You'll end up with burns all over your body from splatter from arc welding and make sure you don't weld in a location where you might cause a fire from splatter or dropping very hot metal.
Enjoy!
As said by others, practice, practice, practice is the only way to become good at welding. Buy a big angle grinder with cutting and grinding disks and some scrap plate/sheet, rod and box section and with your imagination you can fabricate absolutely anything, and your unsuccessful work can be consider to be sculpture for your garden!
Make sure you always protect your eyes with a self-darkening mask otherwise you'll get "arc eye" and always protect your skin with suitable clothing otherwise you'll get "sun"-burn on exposed skin. You'll end up with burns all over your body from splatter from arc welding and make sure you don't weld in a location where you might cause a fire from splatter or dropping very hot metal.
Enjoy!