Mr168
Materials
- Aug 5, 2008
- 731
We are having issues with all of our P91 pipe spools.
The spools supposedly have their end preps machined by the supplier after furnace PWHT. Deoxaluminite primer is applied to the end preps prior to transport, supposedly after PWHT and prior to shipping.
In the field, we are having weldability issues. The filler material is not wetting out and tying into the sidewalls properly, we are having to run it hotter than usual to get adequate penetration and root fusion with GTAW, excessive "trash" works its way to the top of the weld pool and eventually either sparks off or curls up into a tiny "sheet".
Everything equates to the issues you have when welding over heavy scale/oxides. They are having to take a hard stone grinding wheel to the face of the material before they even hit sound metal that begins to throw off sparks. The issue is noticeably worse on spool pieces with the additional furnace bake after induction bending. On the few spools where they have field machined the preps to bring the face up to square and a significant portion of material was removed, the weldability improvement was described as "night and day".
Initially I thought possible decarburization issues from the furnace bake, or chrome carbides working their way to the surface. But if they supposedly aren't baking the spools after machining or priming the end preps on them, what the heck is going on here? There have been no issues with our P1 spools, only the P5B's.
The spools supposedly have their end preps machined by the supplier after furnace PWHT. Deoxaluminite primer is applied to the end preps prior to transport, supposedly after PWHT and prior to shipping.
In the field, we are having weldability issues. The filler material is not wetting out and tying into the sidewalls properly, we are having to run it hotter than usual to get adequate penetration and root fusion with GTAW, excessive "trash" works its way to the top of the weld pool and eventually either sparks off or curls up into a tiny "sheet".
Everything equates to the issues you have when welding over heavy scale/oxides. They are having to take a hard stone grinding wheel to the face of the material before they even hit sound metal that begins to throw off sparks. The issue is noticeably worse on spool pieces with the additional furnace bake after induction bending. On the few spools where they have field machined the preps to bring the face up to square and a significant portion of material was removed, the weldability improvement was described as "night and day".
Initially I thought possible decarburization issues from the furnace bake, or chrome carbides working their way to the surface. But if they supposedly aren't baking the spools after machining or priming the end preps on them, what the heck is going on here? There have been no issues with our P1 spools, only the P5B's.