Straightening out my company's WPS, PQR & WQR
Straightening out my company's WPS, PQR & WQR
(OP)
I have been put in charge of straightening out my company's WPS, PQR & WQR. They are a a mess. It seems that they started by numbering them, back in 1980's with 001. PQR's start with 1001 and WQR with 1200. Some are AWS D1.1 and some are ASME Section IV making it impossible to find anything. Can I re-number them using a revision number? I plan on using a numbering system I seen in IT back in 2010 called "Qualifying a WPS by Testing"





RE: Straightening out my company's WPS, PQR & WQR
You cannot change or revise the PQR numbering as all your mechanical and NDT reports are tied to that original PQR number.
What you can do is allocate the PQRs new numbers just for filing.
As an example - PQR 1001 may be an ASME IX GTAW procedure and PQR 1002 may be an AWS SMAW procedure.
List the PQRs in your filing system as PQR-AS-GT-001 and PQR-AW-SM-001.
The PQRs will remain unchanged but the system for locating them will be much easier.
Hope that helps,
Cheers,
DD
RE: Straightening out my company's WPS, PQR & WQR
You can reidentify the WPSs as a revision to make it easier to find the applicable WPS. The ID system can be a rational alpha-numeric system. Since you mentioned Inspection Trends you will remember that the system in the article listed the welding process, the base metals, and the filler metal. Most welding standards group the base metals as P numbers, Group numbers, or M numbers. The filler metals are grouped by F numbers.
The system makes it easier to identify what the WPS applies to. Some companies assign a number to each welding process, i.e., 1 for SMAW, 2 for SAW, etc. I don't care for that system because the welder or the individual tasked with looking up a WPS needed to know the secret code. I like the system where the welding process identification is more intuitive, SMA for SMAW, GMA(P) for gas metal arc welding using pulsed spray, etc. Whether you use a P-number, Group number, S-number, etc. is dependent on the specific welding standard being used.
A suffix letter can be added to differentiate the WPS from one that is similar. For instance, if the WPS is qualified for notch toughness, it could be assigned an identification such as: GMA(P)-1/1/6-N. If working to ASME a WPS qualified for notch toughness needs to be more specific. The WPS is limited to the P-number and group number, so GMA(P)-1-1/1-1/6-N might be sufficient.
Some people get up tight when the identification becomes too long, but anyone that has had to search through 100 plus WPSs to find one suitable for the job knows it ain't no picnic to thumb through WPS-001, WPS-002, ....... until the correct one is located.
In short, I like any rational system that identifies the key information needed to determine if the WPS is appropriate for the work.
You can adopt a similar system for PQRs when qualifying new WPSs. Just remember each WPS and PQR has to have a unique identifier.
Example: PQR: GTA(P)-1/8/6-250 stands for PQR, Gas Tungsten Arc Welding - pulsing, M1 base metal welded to a M8 base metal, using an F6 filler metal, and the test assembly was 1/4 inch thick.
The rational identifier assigned to the WPS and the PQR indicates most of the pertinent information, the essential variables that differentiates it from another WPS or PQR.
Good luck
Best regards - Al