rmillercwi
Materials
- Jul 19, 2006
- 76
Have done an extensive search and cant find my answer 100%. Doing some consulting at a plant for something un-related and got roped into a P-91 welding issue.
Plant is in an extended outage and has qty 8- 4" weldolets to a 16" sch 80 pipe to install. All 9cr materials. Was asked to ok the contactor procedure. Giving it a quick look, nothing jumped out at me. Right pre-heat/interpass (400/600)temps, right fillers(ER90S-B9 root, 9018-B9H4), rod ovens,electrical resistance heating, cooling to below 200 before stress, 1375-1425 soak temp, slow cooling under insulation....
The only thing that stood in my way was the contractor wanting to perform a 600 f bakeout for 2 hours prior to dropping it to below 200. I know its a good idea but there was going to be no delayed PWHT and the repair effort is being performed inside a building. Field conditions very similar to shop conditions. It will go from pre-heat to weld to cool to stress all in one seamless operation. In this case the bakeout did not seem necessary.
I didn't recall ever seeing a shop welded 9cr joint go thru a bakeout. Reviewed various weld procedures and didn't find a one that listed the requirement. Re-read Sperkos and Jeff H article from back in 05 and saw no mention of it there either.
Stumbled across Eurowelds article from November 01 and various articles elsewhere and many do recommend a 600f bakeout in all cases where the joint has utilized a flux process.
Starting to question my judgement and hoping I did the right thing.
Your opinion of this matter would be appreciated
Plant is in an extended outage and has qty 8- 4" weldolets to a 16" sch 80 pipe to install. All 9cr materials. Was asked to ok the contactor procedure. Giving it a quick look, nothing jumped out at me. Right pre-heat/interpass (400/600)temps, right fillers(ER90S-B9 root, 9018-B9H4), rod ovens,electrical resistance heating, cooling to below 200 before stress, 1375-1425 soak temp, slow cooling under insulation....
The only thing that stood in my way was the contractor wanting to perform a 600 f bakeout for 2 hours prior to dropping it to below 200. I know its a good idea but there was going to be no delayed PWHT and the repair effort is being performed inside a building. Field conditions very similar to shop conditions. It will go from pre-heat to weld to cool to stress all in one seamless operation. In this case the bakeout did not seem necessary.
I didn't recall ever seeing a shop welded 9cr joint go thru a bakeout. Reviewed various weld procedures and didn't find a one that listed the requirement. Re-read Sperkos and Jeff H article from back in 05 and saw no mention of it there either.
Stumbled across Eurowelds article from November 01 and various articles elsewhere and many do recommend a 600f bakeout in all cases where the joint has utilized a flux process.
Starting to question my judgement and hoping I did the right thing.
Your opinion of this matter would be appreciated