The answer is "YES".
ASME IX allows a welder qualified on base metal P(or S) number 1 to 11 to weld P1 to 11.
Please refer to ASME IX QW-423.
Hope this helps.
Sun.
This is a simple stress relieving process the welder can do to minimize warpage of material that was just welded.
Tac welding is not a specific material. Tac welding is a form of welding, that welder's use in order to hold two pieces' of metal together to get a proper fit. The tac weld can be easily broken if the two pieces' of metal aren't in the right place. So if you tac weld anything, the filler is going to be whatever material you are welding.
A number of factors go into this: base material thickness, joining material thickness, wire thickness, shielding gas composition, angle of weld, etc. The best way to determine this is to measure your material, then open your MIG welder, find the wire size of the spool, and read the chart inside of the MIG Welder door.
See the following website: http:/wwwzperiodzawszperiodzorg/certification/CW
They can carry different gasses and a welder can tell them apart without lifting his visor.
A certified welder is one who has successfully passed the requirements of an industry specification for welding in a particular process (SMAW, GMAW, FCAW, GTAW), and in a specific position (1G, 2G, 3F, 6G, etc.), with a specific material (mild steel, aluminum, stainless, etc.) The certification relates only to the specification that was qualified to, in the position qualified, on the material qualified, and only with the process used. A master welder is one who can, or has, passed the most restrictive position (Usually 6G), in all processes, and in many different material groups. There is no mention of "master welder" in welding specifications, it is usually an internal company designation. It is expected that a Master Welder can weld any material, in any position, with any process.
the basic principle of welding is 1. first we have some broken material 2. a welder 3. welder should know how to weld
It depends on what you are welding. If you are doing welding on mild steel go with MIG welding; if it is aluminum or stainless steel then use TIG welding. TIG welding gives a nice looking finish. If you just want to get a decent look, then MIG is preferable and easy.
Fabricators who make stainless steel items must know how to weld it. Welders often don't know how to deal with stainless steel. It's much more complicated than other forms of welding and the ability to do it well increases your value as a welder. There are several occupations that involve the skill of stainless steel welding. One of the most promising occupations is the manufacturing of stainless steel conveyor belts.
This is a simple stress relieving process the welder can do to minimize warpage of material that was just welded.
Tac welding is not a specific material. Tac welding is a form of welding, that welder's use in order to hold two pieces' of metal together to get a proper fit. The tac weld can be easily broken if the two pieces' of metal aren't in the right place. So if you tac weld anything, the filler is going to be whatever material you are welding.
A number of factors go into this: base material thickness, joining material thickness, wire thickness, shielding gas composition, angle of weld, etc. The best way to determine this is to measure your material, then open your MIG welder, find the wire size of the spool, and read the chart inside of the MIG Welder door.
The other welder will also fail.
Yes. There are covered electrodes made for SMAW (stick) welding of SS. I have actually repaired one of my wifes SS cooking pots that had a broken handle with a stick welder.
It can be used to welding and melting various metals such as platinum,gold,,silver.copper.titanium,stainless steel. And it also can be used to polishing surface of organic glass,hectograph.
See the following website: http:/wwwzperiodzawszperiodzorg/certification/CW
The Oxy-acetylene flame is much hotter and the preferred combination for the welder especially when welding pipe and plate metal. Somewhat of a rare welding procedure in modern times. Replaced by arc welding. Liquid Propane Gas burns cooler and is preferred by employers as it is cheaper. Not bad results on light gauge material, again takes longer to heat up. -RedSeal Welder