I think I would still have to disagree. There are some important details left out of your post.
Part C
Acceptance Criteria
6.7 Scope
"The extent
of examination and the acceptance criteria shall be
specified in the contract documents on information furnished
to the bidder."
6.8 Engineer's Approval for
Alternate Acceptance Criteria
The fundamental premise of the code is to provide
general stipulations applicable to most situations. Acceptance
criteria for production welds different from those
described in the code may be used for a particular application,
provided they are suitably documented by the
proposer and approved by the Engineer. These alternate
acceptance criteria may be based upon evaluation of suitability
for service using past experience, experimental
evidence or engineering analysis considering material
type, service load effects, and environmental factors.
6.14 Procedures
"The NDT procedures as described in this code have
been in use for many years and provide reasonable assurance
of weld integrity; however, it appears that some
users of the code incorrectly consider each method capable
of detecting all unacceptable discontinuities."
6.14.5 PT. For detecting discontinuities that are open to
the surface, PT may be used. The standard methods set
forth in ASTM E 165 shall be used for PT inspection, and
the standards of acceptance shall be in conformance with
Section 6, Part C, of this code, whichever is applicable.
IN 10.2 of E165 it states Procedure Qualification - Qualification of procedures using
times or conditions differing from those specified, or for new materials may be performed
by any of several methods and should be agreed by the contracting parties.
E165 10.4 re-qualification may be required when a change or substitution is made in the type of penetrant materials or in the procedure.
In your post you stated "(This takes you to table 6.1 for evaluation)"
It does not send you back to table 6.1, it sends you to contract documents.
As per paragraph 6.8 in regards to alternate acceptance criteria
The owner engineer can make the acceptance criteria whatever they wish as long as they document it.
Therefore in summary;
When it was stated by the owner engineer to use PT, that engineer takes responsibility.
The contract docs that gave the engineer the authority to do so, again means he or she sets the acceptance criteria.
The PT tech should be working to a procedure, that is required per D1.1.
It is an incorrect assumption that all relevant indications can be found with Visual. In para 6.14 it makes that crystal clear.
No where in the normative code (in regards to PT) does it say use table 6.1 for acceptance criteria, rather it clearly refers you back to contract docs in paragraph 6.7 which is referred to in paragraph 6.14.5.
Regardless of what the commentary says, It all comes back to contract documents. If the acceptance criteria is agreed upon in contract docs, or for any reason the owner engineer deemed it necessary to use alternate acceptance criteria, then that's what your stuck with.
Now if this PT test and the acceptance criteria was not submitted to the bidder, then the owner is out on their own, and unless they have a contract stipulation to the effect of being able to call out further testing, they are subject to charges for the additional testing.
When I am contracted to write procedures, or evaluate an a set of procedure prepared by others for the owner, I try to steer them in the direction of the commentary.
But again, the commentary is just that commentary, The owner / engineer does not have to use it.
Regards,
Gerald
The quotes are correct and D1.1 is not my world so maybe I am misinterpreting this but,
AWS D1.1 - 2006
6.10 PT and MT
Welds that are subject to MT and PT, in addition to
visual inspection, shall be evaluated on the basis of the
applicable requirements for visual inspection
6.9 Visual Inspection
All welds shall be visually inspected and shall be
acceptable if the criteria of Table 6.1 are satisfied
In that I believe the code contradicts itself, in 6.7 it clearly states to go to contract docs.
In 6.14.5 it states "ASTM E 165 shall be used for PT inspection, and the standards of acceptance shall be in conformance with Section 6, Part C, of this code, whichever is applicable."
In 6.7 "The extent and the acceptance criteria shall be specified in the contract documents on information furnished to the bidder."
Note the specific statement "extent and the acceptance criteria"
That kicks you back to section 1. in para 1.4 Engineer's responsibilities, D1.1 definitions of contractor, owner, engineer etc.
The only required surface method is "VT". anything else is clearly stated as required the "extent and the acceptance criteria" on information furnished to the bidder.
If you need further clarification, I suggest you read Part B 6.6 in it's entirety.
For that matter, the only other "required" NDE is for tubular connections welded from one side without backing per paragraph 6.11.1 Which mandates UT or RT.
It should also be noted that there is more than one interpretation of the paragraph in 6.10.
The commentary is full of good information, information that should be evaluated by the purchasing agent and engineer of the owner or their representative.
A lot of organizations UT CJP welds, but for instance in the commentary it states "should be UT's or RT'd. It's not a requirement. (except as noted in para 6.11.1)
AWS puts a trump statement in iii in the front of the book:
"Statement on the Use of American Welding Society Standards"
"In issuing and making this standard available, AWS is not undertaking to render professional or other services for or on
behalf of any person or entity. Nor is AWS undertaking to perform any duty owed by any person or entity to someone
else. Anyone using these documents should rely on his or her own independent judgment or, as appropriate, seek the
advice of a competent professional in determining the exercise of reasonable care in any given circumstances."
Except as required by law in some instances, AWS specifically puts the monkey on the engineers back.
They would be stupid not to do so as they would otherwise be open to lawsuits a plenty if even a bolt were to fall on someones head.
Bottom Line: VT is the only required surface method. All others have to specifically be called out by the contract documents, including their acceptance criteria. Owner Engineer trumps contractor as the engineer is clearly designated as the responsible party. As an inspector, trying to step into the engineers shoes with one interpretation or another is a big mistake. Now who pays for surface inspections past visual, and associated rework cost thats another story. Since all welds are susposed to meet the visual requirements before any further NDE (6.11) and if the indication is not visible to the naked eye, that indication and work required to fix it are subject to charges per para 6.6.5 if the inspections are not specified in contract docs. If they are spec'd per 6.6.4 then the contractor has signed on to doing the test as is in which case there is no recourse other than to get it done as is.
Before I take a closer look at the responses I want to thank Gerald, hogan, and rander for their responses to my question. I did do a quick peruse of Geralds response and an answer to one question is: I have not been able to acquire as yet the procedures, the acceptance criteria or anything else, so I'm still shootin blind.
I am leaving later on today to go to Fl to do battle with the forces of evil (just kiddin), and I needed as much info as I cold recieve in preparation.
thanks.
As soon as I get a chance this morning I will take a closer look and respond. Above anything else I wish for these assemblies to be viable and able to do what they are intended to do, but I also am in no mood to allow my company to get a toolin. Your help has been invaluable.
Gerald,
I agree that contract docs shall govern.
I also agree that whatever the Engineer wants the Engineer should get.
But this for us is also a Section 6.6.5 issue. The original contract docs were for VT only. Standard AWS D1.1 stuff. Then, when the parts are 60 feet in the air the Engineer, getting a little nervous with certification hangin in the balance, decides to add PT, and expects us to pay for whatever he finds. If its cracks, fusion, etc we have no problem fixing them(though I have as yet seen no reports to that effect), since there should be none there in the first place, and have even made this known to them already without our being present on the site as yet. Even porosity for that matter if VT missed it and it is in non compliance with Table 6.1.
But not undercut or porosity that complies with table 6.1, but is determined as rejected becasue the inspection service they brought in says so.
I also agree with Rander that in many instances the repairs would not take a lot of time and in the interest of customer relations doing the repairs is not that big of deal. But there is a limit. My thought is that if the Engineer wanted PT then he should have spec't PT in the original contract docs, and we would have gladly performed them. And the job would have been priced accordingly. If the engineer comes back after the fact to impose PT thats OK too. But Section 6.6.5 is imposed.
Does anybody have similar experiences they would wish to share?
"The original contract docs were for VT only"
"with certification hangin in the balance, decides to add PT, and expects us to pay for whatever he finds"
That engineer apparently is unfamilar with para 6.6.5. Based on your description, They owe some money for the extra work.
And yes, I've experienced this more than one time.
"And yes, I've experienced this more than one time."
Kinda figured that.
If all inspection firms and/or inspectors were as thorough as you, my life would be much easier.
Thank you Gerald,
Very helpful.
I would like to take this opportunity to thank Gerald, hogan, and Rander for their posts in this thread. The information made available was very helpful in the meetings I had with the inspection firm and the customer on the project in question.
so what was decided about undercut that bleedes out? imo it should not be cause for rejection