Specification for Low-Alloy Steel Electrodes for Shielded Metal Arc Welding
This specification prescribes requirements for the classification of low-alloy steel electrodes for shielded metal arc welding of carbon and low-alloy steels. These electrodes include steel alloys in which no single alloying element exceeds 10.5%
Content Provider
American Welding Society [AWS]
Please first log in with a verified email before subscribing to alerts. American Welding Society [AWS]
Previous Product AWS A5.5 9018B3 ELECTRODE,WELDING. Next Product AWSA5.14-76 ERNIMD-3 ROD,WELDING. ELECTRODE,WELDING Product/Part Number AWS A5.5-81 AMERICAN WELDING SOCIETY INC. Procurement: Invalid emails will appear to work, but in reality we will NOT receive them. Please make sure you type it correctly.
AWS A5.5 E8018-B2 H4 Welding rods, welding electrode is an iron powder low hydrogen electrode. V AWS QC1:2007 Personnel AWS Certification Committee R. Wiswesser, Chair Welder Training & Testing Institute S. Raymond, 1st Vice Chair International Training Institute G. Hlifka, 2nd Vice Chair The Lincoln Electric Company N. Chapman, 3rd Vice Chair Entergy P. Howe, Secretary American Welding Society R. Arn WeldTech International E. Bohnart Welding Education & Consulting. ANSI/AWS D15.1/D15.1M:2012 - Specification for Low-Alloy Steel Electrodes for Shielded Metal Arc Welding This product replaces:ANSI/AWS A5.5-96 - Specification for Low Alloy Steel Covered Arc Welding Electrodes Browse Product Family: ANSI/AWS A5.5/A5.5M:2006 ANSI/AWS A5.5-96 People Who Bought This Also Bought. AWS A5.5: This specification prescribes requirements for the classification of low-alloy steel electrodes for shielded metal arc welding of carbon and low-alloy steels. These electrodes include steel alloys in which no single alloying element exceeds 10.5%.
Your Alert Profile lists the documents that will be monitored. If the document is revised or amended, you will be notified by email. You may delete a document from your Alert Profile at any time. To add a document to your Profile Alert, search for the document and click “alert me”.
Aws 5.5 Electrodes Vs
Please first verify your email before subscribing to alerts.
Your Alert Profile lists the documents that will be monitored. If the document is revised or amended, you will be notified by email. You may delete a document from your Alert Profile at any time. To add a document to your Profile Alert, search for the document and click “alert me”.
Already Subscribed to this document. Your Alert Profile lists the documents that will be monitored. If the document is revised or amended, you will be notified by email. You may delete a document from your Alert Profile at any time. To add a document to your Profile Alert, search for the document and click “alert me”.
Documents sold on the ANSI Webstore are in electronic Adobe Acrobat PDF format, however some ISO and IEC standards are available from Amazon in hard copy format.
Some PDF files are protected by Digital Rights Management (DRM) at the request of the copyright holder. You can download and open this file to your own computer but DRM prevents opening this file on another computer, including a networked server. Some copyright holders may impose other restrictions that limit document printing and copy/paste of documents.
Those documents cannot be printed at the request of the copyright holder.
Aws 5.4 Electrodes
Chris
I've been there - done that recently. All welding machines (transformers and petrol-generators) at a recent workplace were AC - and I wanted Basics.
Got 7016's from Bohler (good folk!).
Given I am far from the top of the expertise pyramid - I found 7016's just fine on AC, with every characteristic of a 7018 on DC.
Welding operability - superficially you couldn't tell that you were on 7016 AC if you are used to 7018 on DC.
The 7016's AC gave the superb vertical-up fillet, deeply fused and perfectly shaped, using 'the Christmas tree' manip. - used a stub in my holdall from my test with the Bohler trade samples to get that one - saved no end of bother!
Properties...
Set up a sledgehammer test with pieces of equal length angle welded to one large plate with different welding rods. Compared to rutiles (6013's) - far higher strength. Clearly toughness. The angle iron bent with the 7016's leaving the weld untouched. Therefore, to totally prove high toughness I would have had to do a similar test but a nick-break - but that's me being me not claiming anything I haven't seen with my own eyes.
I'm told keep all basics (7016, 7018) dry - like where you would store good clothes. A locked site-box with 1/4inch of water in the bottom won't do for basics, apparently!
So I would say - go for it.
I've been there - done that recently. All welding machines (transformers and petrol-generators) at a recent workplace were AC - and I wanted Basics.
Got 7016's from Bohler (good folk!).
Given I am far from the top of the expertise pyramid - I found 7016's just fine on AC, with every characteristic of a 7018 on DC.
Welding operability - superficially you couldn't tell that you were on 7016 AC if you are used to 7018 on DC.
The 7016's AC gave the superb vertical-up fillet, deeply fused and perfectly shaped, using 'the Christmas tree' manip. - used a stub in my holdall from my test with the Bohler trade samples to get that one - saved no end of bother!
Properties...
Set up a sledgehammer test with pieces of equal length angle welded to one large plate with different welding rods. Compared to rutiles (6013's) - far higher strength. Clearly toughness. The angle iron bent with the 7016's leaving the weld untouched. Therefore, to totally prove high toughness I would have had to do a similar test but a nick-break - but that's me being me not claiming anything I haven't seen with my own eyes.
I'm told keep all basics (7016, 7018) dry - like where you would store good clothes. A locked site-box with 1/4inch of water in the bottom won't do for basics, apparently!
So I would say - go for it.