That's a virtual welding machine, why is that funny?
I thought someone was trolling the newsThat's a virtual welding machine, why is that funny?
Yes, we have two of them in separate classrooms. It helps to gain muscle memory (angles, speed and gap distance to name a few) before heading to the booth. It has several graphs that can help identify what you need to work on to gain better control.I thought someone was trolling the news
It's interesting that a virtual welding machine exists. Do you see a measurable benefit to training with them?
Yes, we have two of them in separate classrooms. It helps to gain muscle memory (angles, speed and gap distance to name a few) before heading to the booth. It has several graphs that can help identify what you need to work on to gain better control.
I'm sure you could have one of your own for the low price of around $75,000. (that hood the student is wearing is around $12,000 alone)All I can say is, WOW! I would like to play with one of those.
See, this is why I'm surprised they exist. Consumables aren't that expensive, but if you can spread that out across several thousand student's tuition it's probably worth it.I'm sure you could have one of your own for the low price of around $75,000. (that hood the student is wearing is around $12,000 alone)
Then you'd have to talk about grindors.The funny part is that Easy Rider refrained from correcting the spelling on welders.
Been pricing consumables? We still go through quite a bit of that as well. Metal is a big cost too.See, this is why I'm surprised they exist. Consumables aren't that expensive, but if you can spread that out across several thousand student's tuition it's probably worth it.