Hi all,
Interesting. Most of the welds in reinforcing steel are fillet welds or their indirect cousins the flare-bevel groove. At times we see direct butt joints that require complete penetration and chisel-point tees. Most joints are lap joints, indirect butt joints, or common tee joints. Very simple, very easy. Fillet welds are taught in the "Basic Welding" courses of welding programs, a little after beads on a pad. AWS QC-10, a national training program for welders, has fillet welds very early in the sequence. Union apprenticeship programs follow similar formats. Strength of the electrode is not an essential variable for the welder. It doesn't take a good welder to weld a fillet weld. An average welder will do, if he can follow a good welding procedure.
The reinforcing steel, itself, welds no differently under the arc than any other carbon steel. The product form, however, is significantly difficult for the direct butt joint qualification. Radiusing around the diameter of the bar takes a lot of skill by the welder. That is why D1.4 has the welder qualify on the smallest diameter for which they'll be qualified. Beyond the rod manipulation, if the welder follows a proven welding procedure the welds will be acceptable.
Now are we teaching our welding students to inspect their own work? I don't think so. Code-based training is only recently being promoted in QC-10 programs or AWS S.E.N.S.E schools. All of the Ironworker Apprenticeship Training Labs have AWS CWI's running their programs. I am confident that these students are learning code-based welding and are capable of evaluating their welds, good student bad students aside. We have bad students in our civil engineering programs and nondestructive examination schools.
Until we establish a national training program, we can't expect that all welding instructors are teaching skills relevant to today's demanding designs. Many are still teaching how to weld a "good bead". A lot of welders don't know how to measure their welds so many rejectable welds result because we have not adequately conveyed what is required. It's like working with adults who haven't learned how to read. We all suffer from their personal handicap. We all should be promoting quality welding education as recommended by AWS and the trade unions. Our country's infrastructure depends upon this committment. That costs money, however, and remember the US is a service society or so we are told.
But I have seen many good welders lay down shoddy welds because they are being instructed to do so by their foremen and supervisors. I was told early on, if you want to keep your job, never argue with the boss. That still holds true. So if the boss tells me not to worry about the preheat and he is the one controlling the weed-burner and my paycheck what am I, as a welder, to do? And after looking at what happened with Arthur Anderson and Enron, it seems most Americans know where this is coming from. Responsibility must come from those of us at the top of the decision making chain.
Low bid doesn't mean low cost as evidenced by the high repairs you note. So engineers and their eyes on the project, the inspector, have to hold the erectors and shop fabricators hands to the fire. Sorry, but that is the way it is when we have welding illiterate management. Make welders do the work the way the specs require. That gets me back to my early statement to EIT2. Buy a copy of the Code and use it. Don't just quote it in your specs. And I would add enforce it.
Koz
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