Hello 357max and everyone else, the original reasoning behind my post was based upon a couple of lines of thought that I had as well as many of the points that were brought forth by many of you as respondents. Additionally, many other ideas and thoughts have been included bringing up more items for consideration.
I had been led to understand(very possibly incorrectly) that specific types of flux-cored gas-shielded wires were designed with specific formulations to react in a certain way with the use of specific shielding gases. In particular, wires designed for use specifically with Co2 had particular levels of C, Mn, Si, P, and S, when these wires are shielded with gas combinations other than 100%Co2 the levels of some of the above listed components don't have the same rate of loss through the arc that they were designed for. Meaning that the as-welded chemistry of the weld deposit is altered sufficiently that you can have detrimental metallurgical issues present that can cause weld deposits that can crack or have other less than desirable performance characteristics.
Another point of my original post had to do with including and readily identifying shielding gas types with the label affixed to the rolls instead of just relying on the specification class number. I was referring specifically to flux-cored, gas-shielded welding electrodes. I narrowed it down to this because I believe this is an area that can be included within this process without being overly burdensome to manufacturers and also not open them up to liabilities or undue additional information. I realize that solid-core electrodes can be used with a myriad of different shielding gases and also different modes of transfer(short-circuiting, globular, spray, pulse) thus it would be overly cumbersome to try to include this information for these products. Back to the flux-cored, gas-shielded electrodes for a moment, it is very evident that incorrect shielding gas applications to "some" of these electrode types can have a catastrophic effect on the finished welds. Public perception of this isn't nearly as evident in my eyes as the public perception and knowledge that is understood when you are discussing solid-cored wires. This is my logic behind this statement: The average shop welder or fabricator can readily distinguish the difference between short-circuit transfer and spray transfer and which one is appropriate to use on light-gauge materials and heavy plate. That same welder using a flux-cored, gas-shielded wire will possibly not be able to so readily distinguish between the way that a 100%Co2 shielded only flux-cored wire runs versus that same wire when it is being used while being shielded with a 75Ar/25Co2 shielding gas. In many cases the as-welded deposit won't exhibit any discernable physical characteristics that would indicate any sort of problem. The problems might only show-up as a result of a failure in service, catastrophic or otherwise.
I did try to research the "C" and "M" wire designators for shielding gas, this definitely wasn't as straight-forward as I would have thought. You can take a look at the following sites for some additional clarification of this topic at the following sites:
http://www.mwsco.com/kb/articles/19990608d.htm http://www.twi.co.uk/content/jk86.html http://www.key-to-steel.com/default.aspx?ID=CheckArticle&NM=83 I also tried to locate this in the D1.1, unfortunately my navigational skills are lacking somewhat so I didn't have any luck. For many of you others you can likely locate it readily, just not the case for me.
Sorry for continuing to beat this one. I guess it's just something that I'm going to have to come to accept, but in the meanwhile, here's my latest rant on it. Best regards, Allan