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Help with weld procedures

Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2020 10:02 am
by Rippin_Lip
Hello All! New to the forum here. Been welding TIG on Stainless and Ti for 8 years mostly gauge material and some structurals with MIG as jobs come through. Looking for some help with weld specifications and call outs on a job I'm quoting. First off, Where can I find details on welding in accordance with 01417 SD-X12142 Class 3? Weld Metal called out is E-100. Not sure if this is the same as Lincoln Electric and Washington Alloys ER100s-1 which falls under the same spec (AWS 5.28) as the called out E-100 on the prints. I can not find a filler called "E-100".

Next Question is about the call outs on the drawing attached. So in my understanding it calls out bevel both sides and weld arrow side with .12 leg. wrap both sides of the weld. Not sure if my interpretation is correct as I don't see a field weld call out and not sure why it would call out bevel both sides and only weld one side. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Re: Help with weld procedures

Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2020 5:23 pm
by Poland308
Looks like they mean welded all the way around, even on the ends. Must be pretty thin material. I don’t know about the material spec.

Re: Help with weld procedures

Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2020 5:32 pm
by SlowTrafcKpRht
You've got great questions. I get maybe not looking bad... Maybe just ask for more specifics from the project manager.

If I were to hire you, personally I'd respect you wanting clarification. Again, I get you might not want to look bad. For me, I say ask...

Re: Help with weld procedures

Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2020 5:36 pm
by Rippin_Lip
Poland308 wrote:Looks like they mean welded all the way around, even on the ends. Must be pretty thin material. I don’t know about the material spec.


The plate will be .380 and the tube will be 5/16" with flats milled in it.

Re: Help with weld procedures

Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2020 5:38 pm
by Rippin_Lip
SlowTrafcKpRht wrote:You've got great questions. I get maybe not looking bad... Maybe just ask for more specifics from the project manager.

If I were to hire you, personally I'd respect you wanting clarification. Again, I get you might not want to look bad. For me, I say ask...
I may just end up doing that if I can't get some good clarification. Thanks for the reply!

Re: Help with weld procedures

Posted: Tue Oct 27, 2020 8:47 am
by manac
The way I read it:
Other side, .12 bevel of part, .18 bevel weld
Arrow side, .12 bevel of part, .18 bevel weld, combination weld .12 Fillet weld.
Wrap ends.
Take it with a grain of salt. I'm not a welding engineer but have designed weldments in the past.
Also any good engineer will be glad to explain or help with a drawing.
From ASW Welding Handbook Vol 1

Re: Help with weld procedures

Posted: Tue Oct 27, 2020 9:40 am
by Rippin_Lip
manac wrote:The way I read it:
Other side, .12 bevel of part, .18 bevel weld
Arrow side, .12 bevel of part, .18 bevel weld, combination weld .12 Fillet weld.
Wrap ends.
Take it with a grain of salt. I'm not a welding engineer but have designed weldments in the past.
Also any good engineer will be glad to explain or help with a drawing.
From ASW Welding Handbook Vol 1
After further research, This actually makes sense. Going to confirm with my customer to see if they can get in touch with quality control for these parts and confirm exactly what they will be measuring for. Thanks!