hungrydinosaur
Marine/Ocean
- Sep 25, 2013
- 41
Hi All,
I am currently working on a offshore structure with beams which have lifting padeyes welded to them. As per DNV requirements all lifting padeyes need to be welded with a full penetration joint. What I have is a padeye 35mm thick and I-beam flange 10mm thick. If we bevel the padeye with a root of 3mm, we are left with a bevel of 16mm on each side. Doing a 16mm bevel weld on a 10mm flange will practically distort the flange.
1. My question is, whether a Complete Joint Penetration is practical here? Otherwise a 10mm bevel on either side of the padeye will be practical to weld on a 10mm flange (base metal).
2. I have done calculations and the 10mm weld are sufficient for the loads. But I want the criteria of DNV to be fulfilled, that is the padeye joint has to be full penetration. Any way out here? Any suggestions?
Thanks in advance.
Regards,
HungryDinosaur
I am currently working on a offshore structure with beams which have lifting padeyes welded to them. As per DNV requirements all lifting padeyes need to be welded with a full penetration joint. What I have is a padeye 35mm thick and I-beam flange 10mm thick. If we bevel the padeye with a root of 3mm, we are left with a bevel of 16mm on each side. Doing a 16mm bevel weld on a 10mm flange will practically distort the flange.
1. My question is, whether a Complete Joint Penetration is practical here? Otherwise a 10mm bevel on either side of the padeye will be practical to weld on a 10mm flange (base metal).
2. I have done calculations and the 10mm weld are sufficient for the loads. But I want the criteria of DNV to be fulfilled, that is the padeye joint has to be full penetration. Any way out here? Any suggestions?
Thanks in advance.
Regards,
HungryDinosaur