doezer
Aerospace
- Jun 26, 2014
- 15
Hi all.
i have very limited experiecne in weld design, and have been assigned a task to look at the design of a flange/pipe welded connection.
im reading all over that a full penetration butt weld is the best.
But why is that?
When I look at a socket weld, the weld seems to be so much more supported, structurally I mean.
You have essentially an inner sleeve located within an outer sleeve. So any structural loads occuring (bending moments etc) are not being taken directly by the wleded joint.
Whereas with a butt weld, its fully 'bendable' at the joint.
I understand you are creating a crack, but if you can verify that the crack is ok for the duty cycle involved and the fluids and pressure involved,
then surely you have a stronger joint structurally??
by the way, this pipe/flange joint will see very high operational loads, not just pressure load, also structural loads due to operation.
the pipe will vibrate and apply bending whilst the flange is secured, so the weld needs to withstand it etc.
hope this makes sense? as I say am new to welded joint design
thanks
D
i have very limited experiecne in weld design, and have been assigned a task to look at the design of a flange/pipe welded connection.
im reading all over that a full penetration butt weld is the best.
But why is that?
When I look at a socket weld, the weld seems to be so much more supported, structurally I mean.
You have essentially an inner sleeve located within an outer sleeve. So any structural loads occuring (bending moments etc) are not being taken directly by the wleded joint.
Whereas with a butt weld, its fully 'bendable' at the joint.
I understand you are creating a crack, but if you can verify that the crack is ok for the duty cycle involved and the fluids and pressure involved,
then surely you have a stronger joint structurally??
by the way, this pipe/flange joint will see very high operational loads, not just pressure load, also structural loads due to operation.
the pipe will vibrate and apply bending whilst the flange is secured, so the weld needs to withstand it etc.
hope this makes sense? as I say am new to welded joint design
thanks
D