Thank you Eng-Tips.
The other variable issue in 1554.1 that annoys profusely is this neglecting to classify standard requirements as essential variables or non essential variables.
Once the Boolean nature of Welding Standards is understood then you can get real smart by playing the logic backwards to get Beethoven’s V th instead of Smoke on The Water. It is a way of checking you have got things right, logically, if you run it backwards. Goes something like this.
Why do we have WPS’s? So that all things that a welder has control over that makes the weldment suitable for service, suitable for service – for the joint under consideration. Everything s/he needs to know to achieve this is on one piece of paper or in one easy to access location for reference.
Why do we have a Code. So that all things that go into making a weldment suitable for service are addressed by the people who need to address them. For the welder we make a nice list for each joint called a WPS.
I can smell an equation, why don’t we say everything a welder has control over that is in code that affects the weldments suitability for service needs to be on a WPS, i.e. needs to be classed as a variable – and appear in the variable table waiting to be addressed by the user.
E.g. if Code says remove arc strikes outside the fusion faces by grinding and performing MPI - that goes on the WPS as a formal variable [I shall leave it to the infantly wise to decide what type of variable, and incidentally you need to know you have removed the affected microstructure of an arc strike not just do MPI on the site. Acid etching is a great way to do this and so very very much superior to MPI which doesn’t do that of course.] It does not stay buried in 125 pages of code for the hourly worker to read through each time s/he has to make a weld and ends up with a strike. They don’t even know they have to do something about it cause it aint on the WPS – right?
Now you have a list of stuff the welder has to comply with from the code, but you also have an inspection checklist.
Backing up a bit further, that then means because it is a variable it should be included on the variable table 4.11 for mandatory inclusion in the WPS. Stops things being kept secret.
Why are there so many mandatory requirements in this Standard/Code that a welder has control over that are not required to be on a WPS? It sets them up for failure. Is it secret society stuff “Oh the welders are not supposed to know those things” like what was once told to me about weld acceptance criteria. Ah there’s another essential variable & we all know where they belong, certainly not in some chart under some chapter heading Management of Quality. Too logical? Only in Spocks world? In my world the code pages are plastered on the walls and every welder is a damn expert on the bl00dy thing.
Then the competition starts, who knows the most about the codes, the welders or the QA. Perfect environment.
End the practice of failing to understand when you are describing an essential variable AND make sure you reference all variables the welder has control over in the variables table. On the flip side, help those that leave variables unaddressed by the variables tables buried deeply within standards to understand that they are setting everybody up for failure.
Since there are NO essential variables or any materials variables listed in the variables tables at all for 1554.1 how about you and your mate see if you can list what they are in any case - for how else would you write a WPS if you are not clear on all the materials EV's. I've done the same - maybe we can compare notes....