Good morning all,
As I am currently working with AWS D1.1 & D1.5 clarification of D1.5 Clause 5.21.3 would be greatly appreciated.
As far as I can see ASTM A 36 and ASTM A 709 Grade 36 are both Group 1 materials (D1.1 Table 3.1) and have the same minimum yield strength and same tensile range.
AWS D1.5 Clause 5.21.1 states " Purpose. The qualification tests described in Part B are specially devised tests to determine the welder's, welding operators or tack welders ability to produce sound welds."
How can the change from A 36 to A 709 Gr 36 alter a welders ability to produce sound welds ?
Regards,
Shane
As long as the material that was used for the test was duel certified to both ASTM and AASHTO it won't change anything.
In my opinion, even if the material was not duel certified and say met only ASTM A36, it still woulnd't change anything,but the paper trail would not be there and that would be a potential problem.
As I undrstand it, ASTM can be used for buildings, AASHTO for highway bridges. When you compare the specs side by side, from memeory I believe they are identical, it not they are close, I'm working from emeory here so I need a little give.
Basically as long as you meet AAHSTO, I think you will always meet ASTM.
Chris
By waccobird
Date 11-02-2009 12:14
Edited 11-02-2009 12:27
Shane
I am working this from AWS D1.5 2002
It doesn't, like you mentioned they are both group 1 Materials, 5.21.3 Base Metals The Base Metal used shall be an AASHTO approved steel as described in 1.2.2 or the wps (see 5.24.1.1) Says concerning base metals Qualifications established with any one of the steels allowed by this code shall be considered qualification to weld or tack weld any of the other steels with the following exception:
Qualification to weld or tack weld steel with a minimum yield strength of 620 MPa [90ksi] or greater shall be established with steel meeting the same specification as steel for the project.
Hope this helps more than hurts
They're both Group 1 only in D1.1. D1.5 doesn't have groups, so from a D1.5 standpoint "both in Group 1" doesn't mean anything. What saves you in this case is that in reality they're not just in the same group but they are the same steel; you wouldn't be able to get away with a simple change of paperwork if you'd used some other Group 1 steel that doesn't correspond to a grade of ASTM A 709 and then tried for a D1.5 qualification.
What it comes down to is D1.5 doesn't deal with steels other than ASTM A 709. As it happens, A 36 *is* ASTM A 709 Gr. 36 (modulo some mandatory CVN testing that doesn't apply to welder qual), so you can get the mill to give you a different cert and you're covered.
Hg