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it depends on the fillet welds dimentions and fit up requirements
It is the heat affected zone. It differs in every weld. but a good rule of thumb is .25" on either side of the weld
A fillet weld is a triangular weld with sides of a width, w by w . The throat is the thinnest portion, which is w divided by square root of 2. The throat thickness is used in stress calculations
A fillet weld is the joint of 2 pieces of material, usually at a 90 degree angle. see http://www.unified-eng.com/scitech/weld/fillet.html
Leg of the weld. Fillet is the part you cut off e.g. a corner...
It depends on the thickness and type of materials being welded.
wildly welding main pipe the are fillet weld or butweld
A fillet weld in any single continuous weldmay underrun the nominal fillet weld size specified by2 mm [1/16 in] without correction, provided that theundersize portion of the weld does not exceed 10% of thelength of the weld. On the web-to-flange welds on girders,underrun shall be prohibited at the ends for a lengthequal to twice the width of the flange.
A fillet weld is the joint of 2 pieces of material, usually at a 90 degree angle. see http://www.unified-eng.com/scitech/weld/fillet.html
The word fillet is used to describe a radius or angle at the joint of an angle instead of a shrap corner. It is sort of like when you use caulk to fill in the sharp corners when you are making a counter top. In a fillet weld you contact both peices of metal being joined at the 90 degree angle to "fill in" the joint.
In a fillet weld, the leg and size are the same for the convex weld.
It is the only type of weld you can make to seal this type of joint. There are flange ends that can be welded onto pipe with a butt weld, but sockets and slip-ons must be fillet welded.