mrbougles
Mechanical
- Apr 19, 2022
- 9
Hi All,
I often read this forums posts but this is my first login and post.
My Question:
Does ASME IX permit any situation for a welder to weld to a WPS without him/her not having a WPQ for that particular WPS?
My company has well over 1000 WPS's. Even if I. Restrict my pool of WPS's to WPS's qualified at my location we still have 100+. I don't have all (we only have 2) welders having a WPQ for all available WPS's though. When a weld needs done urgently (think rig down at 500k a day urgent) what restricts me picking a WPS fur the job the welder didn't have a WPQ for? Obviously, the welder needs to have continuity for the process but what else (diameter, thickness,etc...)? We have and use SMAW GMAW,GTAW, SAW, FCAW WPS's and our 2 welders maintain continuity for these. 90% of the time it is ASME IX (and API) we work to but we qualify and use AWS and ISO also. Let's assume SMAW, ASME IX (with impact requirements) for sake of example.
I seem to have rambled on a bit here but hopefully someone somewhere can decipher a question and give an answer or kick start a discussion. I typed the above on mobile phone so predictive text errors may occur that I haven't spotted. Thanks.
My Understanding/experience Level:
I'm not a welding engineer and I don't ever pretend to be but I'm not totally ignorant of welding metallurgy, code (ASME, AWS, and ISO) and although I'm the closest thing to a welding engineer at the facility I with at which has 2 welders. I have a good network of IWE colleagues located in other countries. I'm in the UK working for an American oil and gas company.
I write and review welding QA/QC docs, PQR, WPS, and WPQ documents and help coordinate welder continuity etc. I get pushed beyond my confidence , welding training, time capacity and competency too often by my employer. I like learning and studying having engineering degrees etc to my name but limited spare capacity to study to become IWE presently.
Let me know if I posted this to the best place on eng-tips.com as still learning my way about the web page.
I often read this forums posts but this is my first login and post.
My Question:
Does ASME IX permit any situation for a welder to weld to a WPS without him/her not having a WPQ for that particular WPS?
My company has well over 1000 WPS's. Even if I. Restrict my pool of WPS's to WPS's qualified at my location we still have 100+. I don't have all (we only have 2) welders having a WPQ for all available WPS's though. When a weld needs done urgently (think rig down at 500k a day urgent) what restricts me picking a WPS fur the job the welder didn't have a WPQ for? Obviously, the welder needs to have continuity for the process but what else (diameter, thickness,etc...)? We have and use SMAW GMAW,GTAW, SAW, FCAW WPS's and our 2 welders maintain continuity for these. 90% of the time it is ASME IX (and API) we work to but we qualify and use AWS and ISO also. Let's assume SMAW, ASME IX (with impact requirements) for sake of example.
I seem to have rambled on a bit here but hopefully someone somewhere can decipher a question and give an answer or kick start a discussion. I typed the above on mobile phone so predictive text errors may occur that I haven't spotted. Thanks.
My Understanding/experience Level:
I'm not a welding engineer and I don't ever pretend to be but I'm not totally ignorant of welding metallurgy, code (ASME, AWS, and ISO) and although I'm the closest thing to a welding engineer at the facility I with at which has 2 welders. I have a good network of IWE colleagues located in other countries. I'm in the UK working for an American oil and gas company.
I write and review welding QA/QC docs, PQR, WPS, and WPQ documents and help coordinate welder continuity etc. I get pushed beyond my confidence , welding training, time capacity and competency too often by my employer. I like learning and studying having engineering degrees etc to my name but limited spare capacity to study to become IWE presently.
Let me know if I posted this to the best place on eng-tips.com as still learning my way about the web page.