KENAT
Mechanical
- Jun 12, 2006
- 18,387
I’ve been asked to properly document a welded assembly that was designed/developed by other staff no longer here with the help of a vendor who now isn’t being very responsive to questions.
They use a system of tabs and slots to minimize/eliminate fixturing at the assembly level.
One thing I haven’t been able to work out is the proper term for their welding technique/procedure and how to indicate this on the assy. From the notes I have they basically melt the tabs into the slot with little or no filler added and as they end up being under flush no routine grinding. I found a little information on the internet but not much detail.
Just to make it harder someone has lost our copy of AWS 2.4 so I'm using until we can find it.
If someone could point me in the right direct on how these welds should be specified I’d really appreciate it, at the moment they’re indicated as groove welds but I’m not sure that’s correct.
I'm in the US working to ASME drawing standards.
Thanks,
KENAT,
Have you reminded yourself of faq731-376 recently, or taken a look at posting policies: What is Engineering anyway: faq1088-1484
They use a system of tabs and slots to minimize/eliminate fixturing at the assembly level.
One thing I haven’t been able to work out is the proper term for their welding technique/procedure and how to indicate this on the assy. From the notes I have they basically melt the tabs into the slot with little or no filler added and as they end up being under flush no routine grinding. I found a little information on the internet but not much detail.
Just to make it harder someone has lost our copy of AWS 2.4 so I'm using until we can find it.
If someone could point me in the right direct on how these welds should be specified I’d really appreciate it, at the moment they’re indicated as groove welds but I’m not sure that’s correct.
I'm in the US working to ASME drawing standards.
Thanks,
KENAT,
Have you reminded yourself of faq731-376 recently, or taken a look at posting policies: What is Engineering anyway: faq1088-1484