BDI, sorry for the delayed response to your question!
Yes, I did manage to weld a beer back together, however I won't post a pic of it because it is no prize! I am a self taught welder and Machinist. And most of my TIG welding in the past was on bronze castings with Everdure bronze. I had done some aluminum welding back at the foundry in the 70's, but that was with a Lindy 460 water cool tig.
The things I did find out while attempting this are as follows; 1st, clean, and with beer can that is a major problem, because on the outside you have anodizing and on the inside you have a polycot. If you do manage to get it clean enough to weld, you are left with about .004 to .005 of an inch in thickness to try and weld. 2nd, the electrode, fill rod, nozzle must be as small as you can get, Like an .020 & .040 electrode, and these days you do not want to use pure tungsten, because you do not want a ball end, you need Orange or Gold Band tungsten which have a higher melting point so your flame will stay focused. 3rd, the flow rat on the argon is also critical, because you need just enough to keep the area shielded, but not some much it will blow away the puddle. 4th, it is hard to find thin enough fill rod, so I ran some .023 MIG wire through a rollers to make it flat and very thin. I won't get into the particular setup on the welder, because it would very according to brand. Finally, from my prospective it is hard to weld beer cans together, however it can be done if everything is just perfect. I did find the welding aluminum foil was much easier to run a bead on than beer cans and I got pretty good at that!
I have a Miller Syncrowave 200 and I should have spent a thousand dollars more and got the Miller Dynasty 200 DX.
Anyway it was a fun exercise, much like when I decide to cut my first set of gears on the mill!
If anyone is a master welder, I would love your input!
Alan