Best Magnetic Welding Clamps (2025): Squares, Multi-Angle, and Switchable Magnets
Top magnetic welding clamps compared: magnetic squares, multi-angle magnets, and switchable magnets. Strong-Hand, Mag-Tab, and Magswitch options reviewed.
Welding clamps, magnetic squares, locking pliers, toggle clamps, and modular fixture systems reviewed. What to buy for accurate fit-up on fabrication, auto body, and pipe work.
Good fit-up makes good welds. Clamps and fixtures hold your parts in position, maintain alignment, and control gaps while you tack and weld. Trying to hold parts by hand or leaning them against each other wastes time and produces crooked assemblies. A $15 set of magnetic squares saves more frustration than a $500 welder upgrade.
Locking C-clamps (Vise-Grip style) are the workhorse of welding clamping. They grip irregular shapes, apply high clamping force, and lock in place so you can use both hands for welding. Buy at least two or three in different sizes (6", 11", 18"). Irwin, Malco, and Milwaukee all make quality locking pliers.
Magnetic squares hold parts at precise angles (typically 45, 90, and 135 degrees) for tacking. Small magnets (25-50 lb pull) work for sheet metal and light tube. Large magnets (75-150 lb pull) handle heavier plate and structural shapes. Switchable magnets let you turn the magnetic field on and off for easy positioning and removal.
Spring clamps provide quick, light-duty clamping. Useful for holding thin sheet metal, backing bars, and heat sinks in place. They don’t apply enough force for heavy structural clamping, but they’re fast.
Toggle clamps mount to a table or fixture and clamp parts with a lever action. Essential for repetitive production work where you’re welding the same assembly multiple times. Hold-down, push-pull, and horizontal varieties handle different clamping orientations.
Pipe welding requires specialized clamps. Chain clamps wrap around the pipe and pull two pipe ends into alignment. External pipe clamps (fit-up clamps) center two pipe ends and hold them in alignment with adjustable screws. Internal line-up clamps work from inside the pipe for root pass access on all sides. For tube frames and roll cages, tube notch fixtures and tube coping clamps hold tubes at precise angles.
For shops doing regular fabrication work, a fixture table system pays for itself in setup time savings. The standardized hole pattern and accessory system means you can position and lock parts accurately without building custom jigs for each project. See the welding tables section for table reviews and fixture system comparisons.
Reviews of welding clamps, magnetic squares, fixture table accessories, and pipe clamping tools. Includes starter kit recommendations by shop type and budget.
Top magnetic welding clamps compared: magnetic squares, multi-angle magnets, and switchable magnets. Strong-Hand, Mag-Tab, and Magswitch options reviewed.
Pipe welding clamps and alignment tools reviewed: chain clamps, external alignment clamps, internal lineup clamps, and pipe stands. Sizing by pipe diameter.
Top welding clamps reviewed: C-clamps, locking pliers, bar clamps, and spring clamps. When to use each type, plus recommended brands from Bessey, Irwin, and Strong-Hand.
Corner clamps vs magnetic squares for 90-degree welding joints compared by holding force, material compatibility, setup speed, and repeatability.
Strong-Hand Tools brand review covering BuildPro welding tables, magnetic squares, utility clamps, and pliers. Product line quality, pricing, and market position.
How to design welding fixtures: repeatability, torch access, clamping force, toggle clamp selection, locating pins, and fixture material choices explained.