Shredd
it came about because Adam in the video below was instrumental in quite a few guys taking up bladder inflated wet seam layups (including myself), but he was using a pizza cutter that had been heated. I tried it and found it difficult to get a consistent weld (as did Adam), so I looked around my shop one day wondering what would work better and my eye fell on my soldering iron that was sitting on the bench. I tried it and it worked a charm so I posted the idea and away it went. The seam sealing is in the first few minutes so you don't have to watch the whole 14min or so.
Like everything in composite work, just because I say it worked for me, doesn't mean it'll work for you - nor will my materials/techniques necessarily work for you (and vice versa) so it might take a lot of experimenting to work it out. I had a pretty low wattage soldering iron, but that was with thin garbage bags to get into compound corners and small steps. For bags I ended up using thicker painters drop sheet and some really thick vinyl(?) which took a lot more heat, and from memory I rounded off a bolt and replaced the tip of the iron with that. You can do any shape you want, but for strait lines like bags I found it best to run it along the a low heat sink straight edge like a piece of smooth timber.
Play around with pulling v pushing, angled vs perpendicular to the bench, tip shape, heat level etc., but you should be able to get a pretty consistent weld.