Y'all will get spoiled with those auto-dark lenses and when you go back to a flip helmet, you'll be seeing the big blue dots more times than you care to!
If you have a hard time seeing and haven't tried a gold plated lens, you need to try one. A #11 gold will make give you the same vision quality as a #8 smoke without the added risk of damage to your eyes (no matter if the UV is stopped or not and no matter if you can see the work or not, the amount light coming through lighter lenses will damage your eyes). Put a clear cover plate over the gold surface to protect it. I've got an auto-dark and the only applications I find it to be of real value is when you're fixturing, in confined spaces and for general GTAW work. For delicate GTAW work I very much prefer a #10 gold lens because the reflected light gives far better vision than a lighter shade smoke or auto lens. Another thing that makes a big difference is reducing the back-light, put a good directional light over the work area that does not get behind the helmet, the less light getting to the back side of the lens, the more that your eyes can pick-up coming through the lens and the less interference/reflection there is. I know it doesn't really apply here but one of the biggest reasons I don't care much for auto-dark's is the additional weight. It's not a problem for short periods but when you've got the extra weight hanging off your noggin for 14+ hours at a time, it gets old real quick. The most comfortable helmet is the Huntsman ultralight, makes huge difference when you're going through a 50# coil of 7/64" NR-311 Ni before eating lunch, loading another coil and getting back at again.
If you need a magnifying lens, spend the extra money and get the precision ground glass lenses instead of the el cheapo plastic $#@*. The plastic's are a total waste of money and are sure to give you a migraine in no time. A good quality ground glass mag-lense will run you around $30-$60 depending on the power & focus length but they are worth every penny of it!
Dave Rase,
Change from CO2 to 75/25 shielding gas and you'll eliminate a lot of the spatter issues especially on the work, clean the gun & contact tip well and coat it with anti-spatter dip (warm the nozzle & tip with an LPG torch, dip & sling the excess off, you'll be amazed at how much aggravation a good nozzle dip will save you.
Kudos' to Pete Allan for pointing out that running GTAW is not like falling off a bike, you can't put it down for a couple months and jump right back into the game - it takes time to get the "feel" back again.
To add to what Rick Landes said, I have one of those little lunchbox welders, it's a field test unit from a different company (different shade of blue and no name on it) but uses inverter technology but this one is 240Vac. I think it weighs around 4 pounds without the leads but the arc is extremely smooth and stable. 20 amp scratch-start GTAW is not only possible, it's smooth, real smooth. I had a Miller Maxstar 150 too, that's a good little power source too. If you plan on expanding as time goes on, consider getting an XMT series multi-process power source, even running it on single phase, it's still smooth!
Also keep in mind that you can now get 1/16" diameter SMAW covered electrodes quite easily. Several companies offer these, avoid middle & far east imports other than from Taiwan & Japan, European imports are fine too. These often come in two ver common grades in the big-box and autoparts/hardware stores: E6014 & E6013 avoid both of them, they are not worth using even if you get them for free. Go to a welding supply shop or look on-line and look for "E70xx" with a reputable brand name on it.
Also, Harris does have filler metals for use with 41xx & 86xx heat-treatable alloys.