rmillercwi
Materials
- Jul 19, 2006
- 76
Regarding common steels such as ASME P1-P5 materials, as I understand it the intent of performing a hydrogen bakeout is to dry out the weld.
The process is primarily performed on welds using the SMAW weld process is it not?
The bakeout is of less importance using weld processes using the GTAW method exclusively is it not?
To ASME, some welds require PWHT and some do not. In varous procedures, I see a trend towards hydrogen bakeout and PWHT being used in the same sentence as if to imply that if a weld did not require PWHT that the same weld would not require a bakeout.
This does not make sense and believe this to be an inaccurate statement. I see the hydrogen bakeout and PWHT as being two entirely different things.
I am currently reviewing a spec for a contractor that has to weld qty 26- 8" 2.25cr elbows inside an HRSG. Half of those require PWHT (sch 120) and half of those do not (sch 100). The weld joints subject to PWHT are (to procedure) are going to go thru a bakeout process at some point after welding and prior to stress relieving. Those weld joints that are not subject to PWHT will not go thru a bakeout at all.
It seems to me that you either do the bakeout promptly after welding or you don't do it at all. What is relevant for sch 100 pipe should be just as relevant (or irrelevant) to perform on a sch 120 pipe. As an owners rep, I am having trouble buying into this.
Using good rod (Lincoln H4) and have adequate electrode drying controls at least documented.
Questions:
How important is the bakeout on 1.25 cr materials (or P1,P5a for that matter) for welds that will NOT be PWHT'd and/or will surely have a delayed PWHT?
What is the point of doing a delayed bakeout? I see none here whatsoever.
How would you perform a bakeout if you did not have electrical resistance heating equipment available? Cant see a guy sitting on top of these welds with a weed burner for two hrs but maybe so?
The process is primarily performed on welds using the SMAW weld process is it not?
The bakeout is of less importance using weld processes using the GTAW method exclusively is it not?
To ASME, some welds require PWHT and some do not. In varous procedures, I see a trend towards hydrogen bakeout and PWHT being used in the same sentence as if to imply that if a weld did not require PWHT that the same weld would not require a bakeout.
This does not make sense and believe this to be an inaccurate statement. I see the hydrogen bakeout and PWHT as being two entirely different things.
I am currently reviewing a spec for a contractor that has to weld qty 26- 8" 2.25cr elbows inside an HRSG. Half of those require PWHT (sch 120) and half of those do not (sch 100). The weld joints subject to PWHT are (to procedure) are going to go thru a bakeout process at some point after welding and prior to stress relieving. Those weld joints that are not subject to PWHT will not go thru a bakeout at all.
It seems to me that you either do the bakeout promptly after welding or you don't do it at all. What is relevant for sch 100 pipe should be just as relevant (or irrelevant) to perform on a sch 120 pipe. As an owners rep, I am having trouble buying into this.
Using good rod (Lincoln H4) and have adequate electrode drying controls at least documented.
Questions:
How important is the bakeout on 1.25 cr materials (or P1,P5a for that matter) for welds that will NOT be PWHT'd and/or will surely have a delayed PWHT?
What is the point of doing a delayed bakeout? I see none here whatsoever.
How would you perform a bakeout if you did not have electrical resistance heating equipment available? Cant see a guy sitting on top of these welds with a weed burner for two hrs but maybe so?