Ameolive
New member
- Nov 30, 2004
- 6
Dear all
I really appreciate if some of you can provide with some guidelines regarding knock-down factors to apply to material fatigue allowables for the fatigue analysis of a welded joint.
I'm asking this because I been reviewing a fatigue analysis of a welded joint connecting two pipe shaped components.
The fatigue allowables used for the analysis do not account for any reduction due to the welding on the basis that :
1) TIG welding is used.
2) A radiographic inspection of the welded area is requested after welding.
3) An heat treatement is requested after welding to restore static stenght.
4) A repetitive 100 hrs detailed visual inspection of the welding is requested in service
5) A reduction factor of 3 is anyway used on the average fatigue material allowables ( this because the analsys results will not be validated by any dedicated fatigue test on the part).
Despite the above considerations, I'm still reluctant to accept a fatigue analysis of a welded joint that does not taken into account any knock-down factor for welding.
On the other hand if we apply the standard 50% reduction we come up with fatigue allowables that are too low ( do not forget the reduction factor of 3 already applied )and I believe unrealistic considering all the provisions taken.
Thanking in advance for any help provided
Ameolive
I really appreciate if some of you can provide with some guidelines regarding knock-down factors to apply to material fatigue allowables for the fatigue analysis of a welded joint.
I'm asking this because I been reviewing a fatigue analysis of a welded joint connecting two pipe shaped components.
The fatigue allowables used for the analysis do not account for any reduction due to the welding on the basis that :
1) TIG welding is used.
2) A radiographic inspection of the welded area is requested after welding.
3) An heat treatement is requested after welding to restore static stenght.
4) A repetitive 100 hrs detailed visual inspection of the welding is requested in service
5) A reduction factor of 3 is anyway used on the average fatigue material allowables ( this because the analsys results will not be validated by any dedicated fatigue test on the part).
Despite the above considerations, I'm still reluctant to accept a fatigue analysis of a welded joint that does not taken into account any knock-down factor for welding.
On the other hand if we apply the standard 50% reduction we come up with fatigue allowables that are too low ( do not forget the reduction factor of 3 already applied )and I believe unrealistic considering all the provisions taken.
Thanking in advance for any help provided
Ameolive