If you do get a TIG and use the thoriated electrodes be careful as they are radioactive. Breathing the grinding dust from sharpening the tip is bad for you and I wouldn't store electrodes close to your person.
More good info.
Looking at my friends machine, I'm not sure I could even learn to set the machine up, let alone practice enough to be proficient.
In my youth I did 2 years of stick welding at TAFE. I wonder if there is anything like that these days for TIG?
If it is left in 2T mode the peak current is welding current and I think the AC balance(my machine calls it clean weld) has an effect on the cleaning of oxide and contaminants.
The arc balance affects the cleaning. Normally you park it in the middle and leave it. Moving the balance only changes the width of the ark not the cleaning affect. But if it's wider it looks to clean more but it doesn't.
I use the arc balance more for stoping my electrode from dripping than cleaning. If you crank all the way to wide clean on a 2.4 electrode above 200 it will start to melt. Turn it the other way and it stay cooler. Sorry if that looks a bit dutch. about the cleaning action. Turn the knob right and the arc gets wider ( sort of cleans better ) The weld pool gets wider and harder to look after as well. Turn to the left and it cleans much the same but in smaller width ,( so appears worse ).
When I used to to do alloy heat exchanges in power stations I would prep the fork out of it , so cleaning action not really needed. I would turn to the left narrow arch for more penetration and a perfect weld. They ex ray most welds after on these jobs and a few failures and your fired.