dr_clyde
Well-known member
First off, it was an ASME test. 21 years ago, I sure don't remember all the details. So, all your AWS drivel doesn't apply.
It was done to satisfy a customer's requirements. They paid for the test. We ran .045 wire, 80/20 gas. Voltage at the upper limit of the test parameters. Eight of us took the test, ran 1 set of practice plates, then the test. 7 passed the first time, one broke and got it the second time.
There are a lot of guys on the internet who really don't know **** from shinola about the finer points of welding. You have found a couple of them.
Miller manufactures and sells welders, that doesn't make them experts on welding. They provide decent basic information. Lincoln does a far better job with education and training.
Most of the job was 1/2 and 5/8. As I recall, all the 3/4 was fillet welds to 1/2. We ran it all short arc for about 3 weeks, until the customer fired the other shop that was working on the job. They then agreed to let us spray arc the rest of the job, as we were already certified.
I'm not saying it's a good idea to short arc heavy plate. It's slow and a general pain in the ***, but it can be done properly. Skill is the winning hand.
So Moonpie, tell us about your experience. Ever welded for a living? Ever certified? If so, what?
Despite sometimes coming off as a know it all and snarky, generally speaking, he's right. I have never seen a prequalified code for short circuit mig, ASME, AWS or otherwise. GMAW-S is considered unreliable by welding code standards and requires each procedure to be qualified. More than likely, the procedure was qualified for that particular job under an ASME code, probably Section IX as the boiler and pressure vessel code is the most universally applicable if you're using an ASME code.
This is a good article about it by the ASME board, albeit a few years old.
https://www.nationalboard.org/Index.aspx?pageID=164&ID=179
Plate certification tests with GMAW-S are certainly possible, but they are exceedingly rare, as it isn't considered good practice.
AWS codes aren't "drivel", FWIW, they're the standard welding code for most weldments in the US. As far as I'm aware, ASME is usually the go to for boiler and pressure vessel, API for oil pipelines, and AWS for just about everything else.
I've certified on several different codes and processes, both for my employers and as my own company for my customers, and it is a very book and paper intensive process, there's a lot more going on for code work than just passing a bend test.
And I know that.
Or would that be
?
and not some other snarkier smilie.
) with short-circuit transfer mode welding.

