

⚡ Weld Like a Pro, Anywhere You Go!
The TOOLIOM 200A AC/DC TIG Welder is a powerhouse 6-in-1 multiprocess machine designed for professionals and serious hobbyists. Featuring dual voltage compatibility (110V/220V), a large LED display for real-time parameter monitoring, and advanced IGBT inverter technology, it delivers precise, high-quality welds on aluminum, steel, copper, and more. Its foot pedal compatibility and 60% duty cycle make it ideal for demanding projects, whether in the shop or on the road.



























| Brand | TOOLIOM |
| Has Nonstick Coating | No |
| Item Weight | 12.68 Kilograms |
| Model Name | TIG Welder |
| Shape | rectangular prism |
A**S
Impressive machine
First off, I’m a semi professional welder. I’m Active Duty military but run a welding and fabrication business on the side working weekends. I normally use high dollar professional welders. I run a Miller Trailblazer off my truck and a Miller Multimatic 255 in my shop along with a Lincoln 180 that I keep .023 Mig wire in for thin stuff. So I’m reviewing this as an owner of an $8,500 and $4,700 dollar Miller welder. I just received this Tooliom 200A Tig/stick welder today. My reason for buying this machine is because I’m currently building a 365 ft long decorative steel fence for a client. I have almost all the posts and panels tacked in. When that’s done I’m gonna hire some help to weld everything in solid. I’m welding on 14 gauge steel so very difficult not to burn through. Running 3/32 6013 on electrode negative. My plan is for one of us to be burning rods off the Trailblazer and the generator from the trailblazer can also power the Tooliom welder. Since drawing power from the Trailblazer’s generator doesn’t effect the arc, should work fine. The Tooliom 200A arrived well packaged. Didn’t mess with the Tig kit yet. I think since the tig torch doesn’t have a way to adjust the amps, I may just order a different torch. I did try the the stick process. Very impressed. I had just tried a friends dual voltage cheap stick welder on 115V and could get it to weld 14 ga steel. Just couldn’t keep 6013 or 7014 arcs going. It really needs 230V. This Tooliom ran 3/32 6013 and 3/32 7018 just fine on 125V. It will get me through this fence job for a small investment. And now I have a very portable welder I can take to friends houses if I don’t want to take my huge welding truck that gets 11.5 mpg. I’m thinking I can use this on quick service calls on light stuff too. I get quite a bit of calls just welding mower decks. I did try this welder on 230V. Ran perfect. It ran 1/8 7018 electrodes really well. I was welding on 3/4 inch scrap plate. 130 Amps burned in nice. Had the plate been 1/4 or less, 125 amps would have been perfect. My Uncle, whose been a welder for 40 years was really skeptical at the manufacturer’s claim of amperage and duty cycle. He unboxed this thing with me and ran it through it’s paces as well. He walked away in disbelief. Very impressed. The only thing I wish the machine had was a hot start option and an inductance/arc force setting. But hey, for $196, it’s a great buy. There were other welders on Amazon for the same price range that offered more features than this one. However, they all had 30% duty cycles where as this one has 60%. Since I’m gonna be pushing this thing pretty hard I felt duty cycle was more important. Since my two Miller’s have every feature you could ask for, it just wasn’t important. I would recommend this for a beginner or hobbyist or someone that just welds around the farm or garage. Or for someone in my situation that only has one Welding truck and needs to have two welders going at the same time. I hope this helps someone decide. If you want to spend a little more money. Say $500, Everlast gets you a far better welder than the Harbor Freight Vulcan and Titanium welders. They are a good brand that sits between the ultra cheap Chinese stuff and the expensive red and blue machines. But again, I needed something as cheap and portable as I could find that would fit the bill. Very satisfied.
S**D
Great value
Disclosure.. I have no welding certificate, but a lifetime of welding stick and a few years of MIG, all with A36 structural steel. I had access to an older "Chicaco Freight Electric Harbor" 130A tig machine (no pedal whatsoever, no HF, scratch start..) so I tried that for a fab project in .065 stainless tube. Totally inadequate. So, I replaced the CFEH machine with this one. Only significant setback was that the argon hose supplied was bigger than the 1/4" nipple on the back of the machine. I also bought an on-off pedal. The machine comes with a start button on the torch, which seemed to not offer proportional amps control, so the on-off pedal seemed compatible. I don't know if the machine would recognize proportional control. I used the machine with 220V power, 100% argon, 1/16 308L filler rod and 1/16 SS 304 tube. The machine requires shield gas and a gas regulator. Also, this machine does not weld aluminum. I haven't even tried, but TIG welding of aluminum requires reversal of welding polarity to start the arc/puddle/weld.. without this, the arc doesn't displace aluminum's oxide skin and weld quality is dangerously bad. Anyway, after replacing the oversize argon supply hose with a 1/4" hose, and setting up the machine.. suddenly, it was almost like I could actually TIG weld! I'm still learning TIG, so I don't have the finesse, experience, or exposure to a top-line pro machine for a proper comparison.. but compared to the "CFEH" box I tried first, the difference was amazing! The arc starts when you want it, nice and stable, the cone is visible, the puddle develops nicely and is easy to see and control. My technique is still developing, so I did "cook" the stainless a bit, but only one small blowout in the first three attempts. The manual includes a table of recommended settings for various welding scenarios, some of these specify 5 or 6 seconds of post arc gas flow.. but another part of the manual describes the machine with a preset 3 seconds of post flow, and no description in the manual or apparent ability to change this setting. Overall, the manual is adequate, but not exceptional - experienced welders won't need a more detailed manual, but for those who make this their first TIG welder, a bit more information, presented better, would be an improvement. PROs: GREAT VALUE for the price, easily portable, can run on 110V, HF start works as it should, accepts A pedal (GET the pedal.. torch button pressure adds another variable to the all-important issue of torch height), digital display of power setting. CONs: Wrong size argon hose (with low quality hose clamps, too.) No ability to adjust post flow. Unknown (or none) support for proportional pedal. Underwhelming manual. No capability for aluminum. TIP: Buy the available on-off pedal. Use the money saved on this machine to buy the BEST AUTO-DARKENING HELMET you can find. Visibility is vitally important, and the $80 A-D helmet that's fine for stick and MIG, won't cut it for TIG. Overall, I am extremely happy with this machine, it will do what I need it to, at a fantastic price.
C**E
Nice little welder
This welder is lite and easy to use. Very nice little welder
M**N
Best welder co around cheap light weight and super good
Best 300$ or less tig machine i have ever used owned 2 years and use it commercially working amazingly
J**P
Would recommend for Aluminum
After spending sometime dialing in this machine and figuring out the best settings for aluminum, I'm pretty impressed. I'm been welding 1/4" 6061 aluminum for the last 5 days and figured I'd be maxing the setting out on 110 but I had to turn it down (alot). It's super light. The quick reference setup in the manual is easy and you can dial it in from its recommended settings. I like how adjustable the setting are, that it can recognize and adjust the which settings you need when your using a foot pedal vs the on/off on the torch which saves time in setup. The performance is good and quality for aluminum is great(going to test it on stainless 316L next) I only had one issue. The when I turn the machine on, the fan would start but the screen didn't come on. I pulled the sheet metal housing off and found the screen was unplugged. Honestly, as pissed as I was starting out, I'm so impressed by the machine, I could careless that someone at the factory forgot to plug it in.
J**S
Will not last very long buyer beware
I had an issue, since I’m a novice, I had the return cable hooked into the wrong port. In my defense, the color didn’t match, and Tooliom admitted they are working to make it clearer. I really appreciated the quick support to diagnose my stupidity. I say this to at least commend their initial customer support and highlight I’m not an experienced TIG welder. I want to be fair. It worked great at first. I was able to get full penetration of 1/8” aluminum at 120 amps, even turned it down to 115 after I got better because the aluminum I was welding was quite soft. I then welded .080” aluminum and turned down to 90 amps. I welded some aluminum frames off and on for about 6 hours, probably 20% of the time, so maybe an hour total. With my practice sessions this welder probably has about 1 hour total of welding on it, one 20CF tank running at 20CFH, 6 second post flow. Then something changed. The cooling fan stayed on after a weld for almost an hour. I waited until it turned off before trying to weld again. When I tried again the welder wouldn’t hold a steady arc or form a pool. I contacted support and I’ve wasted hours of time trying to diagnose everything they can come up with besides the simple explanation that the welder can’t put out the required power. On their advice I finally cranked the amperage up to 160 amps, the maximum it will go, and was able to form a pool in soft 1/8” aluminum that was welding easily before at settings of 115 and 120. I got a fluke meter, yes I know the frequency is higher so there’s some averaging issues, but it showed at 160 amps the welder was putting out less than 100. (I don’t have other means of measuring the AC tig function). At 120 amps it’s putting out between 60 and 90. The peak of 104 in the video is because I stuck the electrode and shorted. Needless to say it was working well and then it wasn’t. Same operator, same setup, same tungsten, same gas flow, same material, etc. What changed from when it was working to when it wasn’t? They still have not answered that simple question. I’ve asked for a replacement or refund. They first said it’s amazon’s policy not to do returns after 30 days. I pushed back and asked if they would stand behind their product or not. They said they’d help. So far, nothing other than more requests to test this and check that. If I hadn’t been on vacation I could have just returned it to Amazon and been done. My fault. I’m done wasting my time. You shouldn’t waste yours either. I bought this welder because it was cheap. Big mistake. I had a small project to do with it and thought it could at least last through a few hours of welding. It didn’t. Now I’m stuck with something that doesn’t do the only thing I purchased it to do, and I’m also out the money spent on everything that I needed to go with it. I haven’t tested any of the stick functions or tig welding on steel. I’ve only used the AC Tig function for aluminum, and that’s all I bought it for. I have a working MIG welder for everything else.
P**.
Great item
Great item...
J**L
Not same as picture
Didn't receive same one as the one pictured but not gonna complain cause it's lot better then the one. One that came has hot start for the arc welding which is very nice to have. Its also the 5 pin for the pedal for the Tig welding part. I'm not a pro Welder or anything just wanted one to learn how to Tig weld. I haven't had chance to use it but it's a very nice Welder. It has a nice ground clamp it's not cheap like some I've seen. But I'd definitely recommend this company the directions are in all English nothing is in Spanish or Chinese which is a buy plus since I don't have clue how to read either. Hope it'll hold up well once I use it if have any problems with it will definitely update this review.
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Hace 2 meses
Hace 2 semanas