Hey Mike,
Good stuff. We are running high frequency start. We have had issues lately with excessive oxides in the weld (ill attach a few pictures). At first we thought it was from the base metal, but we are currently welding on an old heat of bm that ran really clean in a previous lot (100% yield), and we are still seeing the oxides. So now we are leaning more towards wire because we also switched wire heats from the previous successful lot. The large oxides sometimes stick at the toes of the weld, and when welded over top of, it creates lack of fusion which gets rejected at C-scan. Im not sure if these oxides could contribute to causing
inclusions, but the arc can act pretty wild and flutter pretty bad when it hits these big clumps. Adjusting the voltage from 12 to 11.5 helps to agitate the puddle differently and spin the oxides off the toes better and move them to the crown of the weld where they can get machined off. This is the only way we have been able to pass C-scan. The main problem still seems to be the
tungsten inclusions being rejected at X-ray. We have done quite a bit of testing of our electrodes the past 2 months including metollgraphic (for oxide dispersement), chemistry (for thorium content), and weld tests, but no matter what we can’t eliminate the
inclusions 100%.
I may have forgotten to mention that this is an 8 hour continuous spiral ID bore cladding where if it stops at any point its scrap (cannot restart). We currently are trying a 20 degree taper with a .050" blunt tip on the electrode (previosly 40 degree, .050 blunt tip), in attempt to change the location of where the arc is located with respect to the tip. If you look at the pics on my first post of this thread, you will see a spiral looking line on the taper of the electrode. We noticed when this line intersects the tip of the electrode where the arc column is emitting, we get heavy erosion on the side opposite the wire. By changing the taper we have been able to move this line further up the taper away from the tip and hopefully help to minimize the erosion.
The linear locations of the
inclusions are pretty sporadic across the 20” pipe. Some have been towards the start, mid, and end of the weld. We are also purging the entire ID of the pipe and running around 45 cfh at the torch w/ an oversized cup (1.25"). The gas itself is very clean, we have less than 1ppm oxygen at the torch and purge. We run all TIG welded stainless hardlines from a bulk argon tank. It feels like a contamination issue but when you are rejecting an 8 hr weld for a single .005"
tungsten inclusion, it could be a fly farting on the way by for all we know. Its strange though we will weld 2 or 3 good ones in a row and then the next three will have
inclusions. In 2010 we went 25/25 good ones in a row, granted that was with different bm and fm. At the time we were using VIM/VAR (triple melt) filler material, which ran very well. After we ran out of that heat, we had it duplicated the best we could and that's what we are currently using. Ever since we started using it though we have seen these
inclusions and some porosity. We think we have the best wire money can buy, but maybe there is something in it that is just not wanting to cooperate. We have also tested various heats of thoriated electrodes and all seem to be giving us similar issues. Lanthanated electrodes is another option, but we have yet to investigate it much.
Since you brought up the shielding issue, I want to run another issue by you to see what you think. We have three AMI stations and one AMET station that we use to weld a specific seal attachment weld. We have recently discovered that we are getting porosity in this seal attachment weld when we use AMI 2,3 or the AMET station, but not when we use AMI 1. The porosity is 100% all the way around the part. The porosity doesn’t start until the 5th layer each time as well which is important to note. Our gas system is a continuous closed loop system made of stainless hard lines. We bring flexible stainless from the main loop off of each station. The AMI 2, 3, and AMET station are all along the same wall. AMI 1, however is across the room on another wall. We have done quite a bit of testing trying to figure it out. Praxair even came in with their ultrasonic leak checker. We have also tried using argon bottles to take our gas system out of the equation. Oxygen and water content is less than 1 ppm on all stations. Likely unrelated but you never know. We know its not a material issue because we have used the same bm and fm on AMI 1 and there was no porosity whatsoever. We are testing flow rates right now. We haven’t had much luck pinpointing the issue, but whats interesting is the issue arose around the same time as the cladding. I thought you might have some input. Here are some other links to previous threads on this topic if you are interested. Thanks again.
http://www.aws.org/cgi-bin/mwf/topic_show.pl?pid=220850;hl=\
http://www.aws.org/cgi-bin/mwf/topic_show.pl?pid=215476;hl=Brett