Basics of SMAW
Basics of SMAW
Basics of SMAW
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Electric shock Fume, dust and ozone Ultraviolet radiation Hot workpiece and welding equipment Fire and explosion hazards Handling compressed gas cylinders
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Filter mumber
7-9 8-10
60-150 A
150-250 A 250-500 A
10-11
11-12 12-14
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Recommended
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Unsafe working
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Safe working
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The name implies Welding with Electric arc and Shielding from Coated electrode
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Advantages
Most versatile process.
Can be used for all positions and for wide thickness range. Can be used in Shop and site. Highly portable
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electrode to workpiece
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MMAW welding process. Intense heat of welding arc causes flux coating to form a slag and a gaseous shield which protect the weld from atmospheric contamination.
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1)electrode holder
2) flux coated consumable electrode 3) welding arc 4) component being welded
5) fume extractor
6) current return cable
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Electric Arc
Work piece for welding
Welding cable
Earthing cable
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Voltage
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2/3
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+
+
+ + +
DCEN
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2/3 (66,6%)
1/3 (33,3%)
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+ + + +
DCEP
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DCEN
All steels except low hydrogen type Not suited for non-ferrous welding Shallow, narrow penetration Increased deposition rates
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- +
+ 50%
50%
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Power Sources
Types of Power Sources used for SMAW
Alternating Current (AC)
Transformer Motor-alternator
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DC Type
Easy arc striking (especially small diameter) Better for all positions
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Duty Cycle
Definition
It is the portion of the total working time that the power
source must deliver its rated output without exceeding a predetermined temperature limit.
Normally defined in a total time span of 10 minutes.
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12000 10000 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 300
Welding Current - A
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MG Set
Inverterised Machines
Assumption Input supply Investment Electrical cost Input current consumption for 4 mm electrode welding at 160 amps.
400 V, 3 PH
2 to 3 X 24 A
0.249 KWH
( 3x400x24x 0.9) 1000 x 60
1.25 X 18 A
0.187 KWH
( 3x400x18 x0.9) 1000 x 60
1.25 X 16 A
0.166 KWH
( 3x 400x16x0.9) 1000 x 60
X 7A
0.0727 KWH
( 3x400x7x 0.9) 1000 x 60
Electrical units consumed for 1 stick electrode per minute( Considering welding time of 1 minute per electrode)
Cost @Rs. 6 per electrical unit per electrode of 4 mm Cost of average no. of 180 electrodes consumed per shift per machine
Electrode holders
This model has a fixed jaw and a spring loaded flexible jaw to apply pressure to grip the electrode
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Wire Brush
Used for removing
Note - Always use the wire brush suitable for the basic metal - to avoid any traces of contamination
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Earth clamps
The return cable for
in brass or copper.
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Welding Shield
Necessary to
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Filter mumber
7-9 8-10
60-150 A
150-250 A 250-500 A
10-11
11-12 12-14
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MMAW Electrodes
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In the begining arc welding was attempted with bare wire and then various coated electrodes were developed
1885 1889 1907 1912 1914 1927 1930 1932 1948 1960 Russia, Great Britain Russia + USA Sweden USA Strohmerger UK Benardos & Olszewki (carbon arc) Slavianof + Coffin (bare electrode) Kjellberg (covering for stabilise arc) (asbestos covering) (cellulose covering) Extrusion Iron oxide Rutile Iron powder Calcium, Zirconium, Iron powder coating.
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Functions
Principal
Shielding Gas former Shielding Gas former Slag former Shielding Gas former Slag former
Secondary
Improve arc force Improve fluidity Improve fluidity Improve fluidity Arc Stabiliser
Potassium titanate
Feldspar Mica
Arc Stabiliser
Slag former Assist in extrusion
Slag Former
Arc Stabiliser Arc Stabiliser
Argile
Silica Asbestos Manganese di oxide Iron oxides Iron powder Ferro silican
Assist in extrusion
Slag former Slag former Slag former Slag former Improve deposition rate De-oxidiser Alloy addition (Mn) Binder Arc stabilser
Slag Former
--Assist in extrusion Metal addition --Adherence of coating to core wire Metal addition
Ferro manganese
Sodium Silicate Pottassium Silicate
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De-oxidiser
Improve fluidity Binder
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E XXXX - H
Tensile Strength in KPSI Hydrogen level (HmR)
H = 5 ml / 100g of WM R = low moisture pick-up
Useable positions
1=all positions 2=flat + horizontal 4=vertical down
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IS 814 EBXXXXHJ
Metal recovery 120%
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Selection of electrodes
Material is to be welded - its chemical composition
Its susceptibility to weld-metal cracking Strength - mechanical properties required Thickness of the material Type of joints Welding positions to be used Type of welding power source used, AC or DC
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Electrode Identification
Colour coding Tip and/or grip end Name Printing Brand Name and/or Spec
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Packing of Electrodes
Cardboard carton Plastic cartons Vacuum sealed in Al foil Hermetically sealed cans
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Electrode angle
Electrode travel speed Arc length
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Penetration produced with the alternating current is midway between that achieved with negative polarity and positive polarity.
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DCEN
AC
DCEP
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Arc Length
Longer arc lengths = increased puddle heat, flatter and wider weld bead, less penetration Shorter arc lengths = less puddle heat, flatter and narrow weld bead, deep penetration Use arc length to control puddle size, penetration, and burn through.
Excess penetration
Burn-through Undercut Irregular weld profile
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Excess penetration Burn-through Undercut Irregular weld profile Weld bead contour too high
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MMAW Techniques
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Arc Striking
2 Methods
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Restarts
Stagger all starts and stops or use run-on, run-off tabs Feather all restarts & start on top, or start in front and remelt Dont restart in a coupon area. Also stagger all beads on a single pass. Use a longer arc length when starting a weld.
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Craters
end
Use a short arc length to control heat.
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Weld Bead
A weld resulting from a pass
Weave Bead
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Stringer Bead
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Techniques
Stringer (drag) (whip)
Weave
Circles crescent zig zag box weave double J
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Positions of welding
Down hand 1G
Horizontal 2G
Vertical 3G
Overhead 4G
Downhand 1F
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Horizontal 2F
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Progression (vertical)
Up
deeper penetration Higher deposit rate (Kg/hr) Use near 90 degree travel angle or slightly up
Down
faster (point to point) less penetration for thin metal
less dilution
Use steep grag angle
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welding
Whip backwards for penetration Whip forwards to reduce penetration Do Not Weave a root pass.
keyholing technique.
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Root faces - 0 450 included angle Remove all mill scales and rust Tacking - not in groove
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5 4
3
2 1
8 5 6 3 4 2 1
9 10 7
Weld Defects
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WELD DEFECTS
TYPES
THEIR ORIGIN HOW TO AVOID THEM QUALITY CONTROL
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Incomplete penetration
Lack of root fusion Execess penetration Root concavity Shrinkage groove Burn through
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Bulbous contour
Unequal legs
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Undercut
Parent metal/HAZ
Transverse
Crater
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GROUP 5 - MISCELLANEOUS
Spatter
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Weld Spatter
Bubbles of gas becoming entrapped in the molten globule of metal, expanding with great violence and projecting small drops of metal outside the arc steam The spatter may be due to 1. Excessive arc current. 2. Longer arcs. 3. Damp electrodes. 4. Electrodes with improper wire or flux ingredients. 5. Arc blow making the arc uncontrollable.
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GROUP 5 - MISCELLANEOUS
Overlap
GROUP 5 - MISCELLANEOUS
Excess penetration
Root concavity
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geometrically to a crack
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effect at weld toe/trap slag - up to 0.8 mm acceptable if it lies parallel to the applied force - up to 0.25 mm acceptable if it lies transverse to the applied force.
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indications in a line separated by 1.6 mm or less edge to edge distance are unacceptable
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Weld Defects
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Ensure low S&P in Materials High S to Mn ratio in weld Use of Welding consumables
Effect of weld shape on cracking tendency: a) W:D = 1, sound weld b) W:D = 1.4, sound weld c) W:D = 0.7, weld tends to crack d) W:D = 2.0, weld tends to crack
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Effect of shape of root run: a) Incorrect, top concave b) Correct, flat or slightly convex
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Effect of weld shape in multipass welds: a & b) Concave with tendency to crack c) Slightly convex weld beads
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bead with an adequate D to W ratio, or with sufficient throat thickness (fillet weld) (recommend a depth to width ratio of at least 0.5:1).
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segregation and excessive transverse strains in restrained joints. As a general rule, weld beads whose D to W ratio exceeds 2:1 will be prone to solidification cracking.
Avoid high welding speeds (at high current levels)
which increase the amount of segregation and the stress level across the weld bead.
At the run stop, ensure adequate filling of the
Lamellar tearing
Transverse strain - the shrinkage strains on welding must act in the short direction of the plate ie through the plate thickness Weld orientation - the fusion boundary will be roughly parallel to the plane of the inclusions Material susceptibility - the plate must have poor ductility in the throughthickness direction
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will cause distributed porosity and greater than 1.5% results in gross surface breaking pores.
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Hydrogen
- Dry the electrode and flux - Clean and degrease the workpiece surface
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addition during termination of welding cause crater pipe formation - Can be avoided by using down slope in Power Source and with adequate wire addition
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Records
Familiarity with workmanship standards and all
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Review materials/welding consumables to be used Review storage and issue procedures of welding
consumables
Check condition of Power Sources and Calibration
Records
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Drawing Requirement
Check adequacy of preheating/ postheating
arrangements
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Act
How to improve next time?
Plan
What to do? How to do it?
Check
Did things happen according to plan?
Do
Do what was planned
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traceability database
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Distortion in Welding
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Longitudinal Shrinkage
Angular distortion Bow
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Distortion Control
Eliminate unnecessary welds
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Distortion Control
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Distortion Control
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Distortion Control
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Distortion Control
Use back-to-back Setup with or without offset to increase rigidity of assembly
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Distortion Control
Use various weld sequence to distribute heat uniformly
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Distortion Control
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Rigid clamps may promote cracking tendency. Use clamping with imagination to allow movement in some direction while preventing distortion in required directions
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Distortion Correction
Wedge shaped heating rapidly at high points is key to flame straightening
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Productivity in Welding
Steps to Reduce Your Welding Costs Cost of welding Material Cost Welding Consumables Labour Cost Energy Cost Electricity for Power Sources Preheating Cost of finishing operations like cleaning, grinding etc.
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Productivity in Welding
Eliminate any extra welds from the design Optimize joint preparation Enhance current welding processes and procedures Control shop tendency to overweld
Analyze whether material handling is effective Deliver consumables and accessories close to the welding points Conduct energy audit of existing power sources
Productivity in Welding
Wrong WEP leading to excess Weldmetal
Increase 66%
Increase 133%
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Productivity in Welding
Manual Process
20 40 %
Semi-automatic 30 50 %
Mechanised
Automatic
40 60 %
50 90 %
Productivity in Welding
MG Set
Inverterised Machines
Assumption Input supply Investment Electrical cost Input current consumption for 4 mm electrode welding at 160 amps. Electrical units consumed for 1 stick electrode per minute( Considering welding time of 1 minute per electrode)
400 V, 3 PH
2 to 3 X 24 A
0.249 KWH
( 3x400x24x 0.9) 1000 x 60
1.25 X 18 A
0.187 KWH
( 3x400x18 x0.9) 1000 x 60
1.25 X 16 A
0.166 KWH
( 3x 400x16x0.9) 1000 x 60
X 7A
0.0727 KWH
( 3x400x7x 0.9) 1000 x 60
Cost @Rs. 6 per electrical unit per electrode of 4 mm Cost of average no. of 180 electrodes consumed per shift per machine Saving per shift over other machines
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Rs. (-)124
Rs. (-)102
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Productivity in Welding
What is the most Common Activity in a Fabrication Shop Grinding ? Welding ? Material Handling ? Machining ?
Productivity in Welding
Where will you focus your Improvement Initiatives ?
Towards Saving Money ? Or
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material was used Enables re-design for unforseen conditions using the actual properties Evidence for use at an inquest
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