Welding Tools
Engineer Advice
Paul Jones says
Welding tools are the day‑to‑day kit that keeps most bodyshop and fabrication work moving, from panel repairs to jig work and bracket fabrication. In a real workshop you are constantly swapping between clamping, measuring, grinding and tacking, so the tools need to be quick to adjust and robust enough to survive being dropped, overheated and generally abused.
The main technical points I look at are how well a tool actually holds or controls the joint, and whether it copes with typical materials in a bodyshop: thin automotive steel, high‑strength steels, aluminium and coated panels. Poorly made magnets, clamps or pliers often slip as the part heats up, which shows up as distortion, wide gaps and extra time on rework.
A common issue is trying to get by with DIY‑grade accessories on professional machines; they simply do not stay accurate under heat and spatter. Decent welding tools are not about looks, they are about repeatable alignment and safe handling, which directly affects weld quality, job time and workshop reliability.
The main technical points I look at are how well a tool actually holds or controls the joint, and whether it copes with typical materials in a bodyshop: thin automotive steel, high‑strength steels, aluminium and coated panels. Poorly made magnets, clamps or pliers often slip as the part heats up, which shows up as distortion, wide gaps and extra time on rework.
A common issue is trying to get by with DIY‑grade accessories on professional machines; they simply do not stay accurate under heat and spatter. Decent welding tools are not about looks, they are about repeatable alignment and safe handling, which directly affects weld quality, job time and workshop reliability.
Paul Jones, Technical Director