pipewelder1999
Industrial
- Mar 17, 2002
- 309
I have recently taking some work for a testing lab as a contract employee. I have been performing visual inspections of welds and doing so for years. This however has been my first venture into IBC 2012 related inspections.
At 1st, I was just told to "go do a visual" on completed welds. Well, that led me to believe that maybe I had just by chance found a couple of projects in which the contractors had no clue regarding weld quality. Now that I have been doing it a couple of months, I have experienced feedback indicating that actually "inspecting" welds in the past was performed using different methods than I employ. Smoke on the paint, verifying the weld is THERE, etc.. vs. actually measuring and inspecting all of the visible attributes of the weld.
On my 1st jobs, I noticed the "special inspection" tables and made assumptions that there was some other organization doing that and that the contractor just wanted to make sure the visual appearances were per the AWS D1.1. I later came to learn that I was working for a lab, hired by a geo contractor, hired by the contractor to perform "special inspections".
Now based upon my limited experience, it appears as far as structural steel inspections of bolting and welding go, very few projects have the coverage performed as stated on the schedule of special inspections. Now, I try to always state that I only looked at the final appearance of welds and did not participate in any inspections/verification of inspections prior to or during welding. The whole group of operations seems to be somewhat of a farce as far as compliance goes yet it has been in place for some time by my understanding here in Tennessee. But even regardless of "how long", Owners, Designers, and Contractors surely see the requirements, yet I come across projects with horrendous weld quality, missed bolts, no proper WPS/WPQ documentation (outside of my scope but I still ask sometimes).
It is my understanding that the IBC code is referred to by many jurisdictions including the ones I have worked in. Yet it seems that when I go do my job as an inspector and actually document welds not meeting the applicable criteria, its a suprise. I have been warned on more than one occasion about "opening a can of worms". A strange concern for an organization involved in inspections. Not to mention the fact that many preliminary or in-process inspections are never completed.
1) Is the entire system just something that was put in place and never followed up or monitored.
2) Do inspectors and engineers feel that their presence on the job site without actually looking at everything that is required is suitable.
3) Do AISC contractors not ever perform their own QC and just depend on what the "inspector finds"?
4) Am I just experiencing a very limited sector of the country in which a "new" system has just been slow to become normal or is it like this elsewhere.
5) Is there a market for organizations that strive to comply 100% with the documented requirements or are industries fully satisfied with the all powerful "certified" signature of an individual and his/her credentials with no regard for what really happens in the field.
Thanks in advance for any comments made related to the topic. It is possible that my experience is extremely limited so forgive me for any extreme observations.
As I read more about the IBC/AISC360 requirements, I become more prone to separate myself from anything related to it. I had considered performing special inspections as a service offered by my company once I get it started however, if I don't holster the can opener, my reputation may prevent that from being a profitable industry sector for my company....and maybe thats a good thing.
Have a great day and thank you again from Northeast Tennessee.
At 1st, I was just told to "go do a visual" on completed welds. Well, that led me to believe that maybe I had just by chance found a couple of projects in which the contractors had no clue regarding weld quality. Now that I have been doing it a couple of months, I have experienced feedback indicating that actually "inspecting" welds in the past was performed using different methods than I employ. Smoke on the paint, verifying the weld is THERE, etc.. vs. actually measuring and inspecting all of the visible attributes of the weld.
On my 1st jobs, I noticed the "special inspection" tables and made assumptions that there was some other organization doing that and that the contractor just wanted to make sure the visual appearances were per the AWS D1.1. I later came to learn that I was working for a lab, hired by a geo contractor, hired by the contractor to perform "special inspections".
Now based upon my limited experience, it appears as far as structural steel inspections of bolting and welding go, very few projects have the coverage performed as stated on the schedule of special inspections. Now, I try to always state that I only looked at the final appearance of welds and did not participate in any inspections/verification of inspections prior to or during welding. The whole group of operations seems to be somewhat of a farce as far as compliance goes yet it has been in place for some time by my understanding here in Tennessee. But even regardless of "how long", Owners, Designers, and Contractors surely see the requirements, yet I come across projects with horrendous weld quality, missed bolts, no proper WPS/WPQ documentation (outside of my scope but I still ask sometimes).
It is my understanding that the IBC code is referred to by many jurisdictions including the ones I have worked in. Yet it seems that when I go do my job as an inspector and actually document welds not meeting the applicable criteria, its a suprise. I have been warned on more than one occasion about "opening a can of worms". A strange concern for an organization involved in inspections. Not to mention the fact that many preliminary or in-process inspections are never completed.
1) Is the entire system just something that was put in place and never followed up or monitored.
2) Do inspectors and engineers feel that their presence on the job site without actually looking at everything that is required is suitable.
3) Do AISC contractors not ever perform their own QC and just depend on what the "inspector finds"?
4) Am I just experiencing a very limited sector of the country in which a "new" system has just been slow to become normal or is it like this elsewhere.
5) Is there a market for organizations that strive to comply 100% with the documented requirements or are industries fully satisfied with the all powerful "certified" signature of an individual and his/her credentials with no regard for what really happens in the field.
Thanks in advance for any comments made related to the topic. It is possible that my experience is extremely limited so forgive me for any extreme observations.
As I read more about the IBC/AISC360 requirements, I become more prone to separate myself from anything related to it. I had considered performing special inspections as a service offered by my company once I get it started however, if I don't holster the can opener, my reputation may prevent that from being a profitable industry sector for my company....and maybe thats a good thing.
Have a great day and thank you again from Northeast Tennessee.