CW1555
Yes things got turned around, the requirement was questioned and thought waived because it was in excess of the code during the kick off meeting for the project By the Engineer but apparently was not picked up in the changes made before the project started. When the Inspector came on site he came with a personal aggenda. I did screw up on not getting it in writing before the inspector influenced the Owner, everyone remembers the discussion, but no one wants to ruffle feathers but me.
As for the Welder, He has full support from our organization, His Union, the General Contractor and such. We, his employer put him on another of our jobs. I told the inspector I didn't accept his sign off on our welders, his call meant nothing in my program. The welder is a good welder, just had a brain fart that day, tested on equipment he was not used to and didn't question his concerns and kept welding.
Whats really upsetting is four or five production welds were Ultrasonic tested and found acceptable by this Inspector before he found this one requirement he could ding me on. the welders documents have been approved by many other CWIs on different jobs, probably because they thought the errors where insignificant and menial, I don't know.
We use Union hands and we do not know exactly who will be sent to our field site and only get their documents as they arrive. The site Superintendent brought the crew in and sent the documents straight to the Inspector without processing them through me, of which I have never been a part of that process in the field anyway. The Inspector comminced to chew them up, some issues rightly so, but out of seven issues on these documents, four I showed him he was wrong, two were data entry or ommision errors by the testing group and finally the last issue at the last minute, the project requirement. He spread the situation across the first two weeks, I only got involved after the fact when no one on site could address the issues, towards the last of the first week. So that's why it got that far, things happen sometimes, and our industry works on schedules, the welder was qualified and certified, in ours, the general contractors and Unions eyes, which included three other CWIs. The problem was we could not get the ear of the Owner.
I quoted all you referenced, whats sad the Owner sat in the "bring it to a head" meeting and said it "all sounds reasonable" but then came down on the side of the Inspector, and all he provided is his statement on the "intent" of the code. Each time the owner looked at him and asked if what I was quoting was correct, he said yes, but came back and convinced the Owner on the "intent". I do not blame the owner, he needs to trust the "professional" he hires for his expertise, and they don't want to think they hired an idiot.
oh well, on we go, I've implemented for our field projects a QA review, by me, to avoid this in the future. It adds to my work load I'm the shop QA Manager, but at least the Hall is a good bunch and jumped through hoops for me on this issue.