Goose123
Structural
- Mar 2, 2023
- 9
Hi all,
First off, I am new to the world of AWSs, PQRs, and WPQs. We have never had to approve them as we only did design and a consultant would be hired for the EDC. However, on this project we took on the EDC.
We are working with AWS D1.5. This is for groove welds.
We have a situation where we have many types of various groove weld joints that are not covered by a prequalified WPS. However, the joining method is very similar for all (same electrodes, base material, etc.). The difference is just the joint used as shown in figures 4.4 and 4.5 in AWS D1.5 (these are similar to the standard figures found by the weld symbols in AISC steel construction manual) and maybe the weld position.
From my understanding, a PQR, is the record of the welding parameters and test results which show a sound weld can be deposited. The WPS is the recipe, the instruction on how to complete each weld. Since a PQR has shown that these materials weld together properly do we need a WPS for every single joint configuration, or can a few WPSs say, in more formal language, "this welding process can be used for all the standard joint configurations"?
Hopes this makes sense.
Thanks.
Short version: Does each weld joint on the project need its own WPS or can a few groove weld WPSs cover all standard joints?
EDIT* This is for FCAW-G welding.
engineering is the science of approximation
First off, I am new to the world of AWSs, PQRs, and WPQs. We have never had to approve them as we only did design and a consultant would be hired for the EDC. However, on this project we took on the EDC.
We are working with AWS D1.5. This is for groove welds.
We have a situation where we have many types of various groove weld joints that are not covered by a prequalified WPS. However, the joining method is very similar for all (same electrodes, base material, etc.). The difference is just the joint used as shown in figures 4.4 and 4.5 in AWS D1.5 (these are similar to the standard figures found by the weld symbols in AISC steel construction manual) and maybe the weld position.
From my understanding, a PQR, is the record of the welding parameters and test results which show a sound weld can be deposited. The WPS is the recipe, the instruction on how to complete each weld. Since a PQR has shown that these materials weld together properly do we need a WPS for every single joint configuration, or can a few WPSs say, in more formal language, "this welding process can be used for all the standard joint configurations"?
Hopes this makes sense.
Thanks.
Short version: Does each weld joint on the project need its own WPS or can a few groove weld WPSs cover all standard joints?
EDIT* This is for FCAW-G welding.
engineering is the science of approximation