Tek-Tips is the largest IT community on the Internet today!

Members share and learn making Tek-Tips Forums the best source of peer-reviewed technical information on the Internet!

  • Congratulations TugboatEng on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Welding Pls answer

  • Thread starter Thread starter Vinom
  • Start date Start date
V

Vinom

Guest
Hi All,


Im stuck with a drawing which as a welding symbol.I cant findthe type of weld.


What it is/What does it mean?


And how do I model it in Pro/Engineer?


View attachment 5736


Thnx in advance


Vinom
 
Symbol looks like a doubble flange butt weld (or edge flange butt weld, not sure about the english words)


I dont use welding symbols in Pro/E though.
 
Thnx ank.


Is ther anyone who got to used this weld?
 
141 refers to a weld pocess standard which is company specific, The dot indicates that the weld to be carried out at site (field weld), the weld symbol is wrongly indicated for a surface weld. It should be reverse.


It is difficult to imagine without knowing the shape of the components being welded.


http://www.arcraftplasma.com/weldingsymbols.htm


http://www.aws.org/technical/errata/A2.4errata.pdf
 
That is a flange-edge weld, far side, all-around. The 141 is likely a company weld reference referring to the type of process.

Pro has this symbol in the weld symbol library, it is called an "Edge_Flange" weld symbol.

Srini, If it were a field weld, it would have a flag, not a circle.



Edited by: dross
 
dross said:
Srini, If it were a field weld, it would have a flag, not a circle.
Yes dross, we are both right. Some companies show a Filled Circle for "Field weld" and a normal circle for weld "all around". I do not know if it is derived from ISO system of weld symbols. AWS indication is a Flag. I shall check in Proe for the symbol.
Edited by: SRINIVASANIYER1
 
How would you do an all around in the field??
 
@dross: e.g. pipes transpored to site, located in position and then welded. This is just an example of a possibility. We can comment only when we know the shape of the components being welded.
 
What I mean is what symbol would you use for an all around weld performed in the field? If you're using a filled dot for a field weld, you wouldn't be able to see the non-filled dot (circle) used for the all around.
 
@dross: May be true. But the draftsperson ensures that the boundary circle and the filled circle are very clear. I was lucky to lay my hands on a link.


http://www.in.gov/indot/files/BCDRAppendixC.pdf
 
Interesting that it says that it is from the American Welding Society.

In all my years of engineering, I've never seen that symbol for field weld.
Our symbols come from the American National Standard (ANSI), which is sponsored by the American Welding Society. ANSI states the symbol should be a flag.
I wonder if something was lost in translation?
 
@Vinom: I really deserve a treat for the below link.


http://yusuf.mansuroglu.com/Welding_Symbols_on_Drawings.pdf


The weld is to ISO standard. 141 refers to TIG Welding. Probably the components are SS. The weld symbol indicates that the toe of the weld shall be blended smoothly.


@Dross: the link above gives a comparison of ISO and AWS. Both the standards have Flag for Field weld. The last I used welding symbols was 25 years ago. It is possible that was an Indian Standard which could have been a British legacy standard. These days, Indian Standards are brought inline with the ISO standards. It is possible the symbols too have changed.
 

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor

Back
Top