Our Sites

Assessing developments in orbital welding—Part 2

Improvements in software, hardware, documentation

Editor's Note: This article is the second part of a two-part series about developments in orbital welding. Part I discusses power supplies, weld heads, and electrodes. Part II focuses on hardware and accessories that improve weld quality and software that documents the welds.

Image

The growing use of orbital welding is driven mainly by enhancements it can offer to productivity, quality, consistency, traceability, and ease of use.

  • Productivity. Orbital welding systems, because they are largely automated, weld quickly. Furthermore, they weld at the same speed from the beginning of a shift until the end of a shift.

  • Quality. The weld quality produced with an orbital welding system and a suitable weld program is superior to that made by other methods. In applications such as semiconductor and pharmaceutical tube welding, orbital welding is the only way to meet weld quality requirements.

  • Consistency. Once a weld program has been established, an orbital welding system can perform the same weld hundreds of times with a high level of repeatability. Automation eliminates the variability, inconsistencies, errors, and defects associated with manual welding.

  • Traceability. Orbital welding power supplies can record a real-time data log file that records any deviation from set parameters. These data log files can be printed with the machine's internal printer or recorded on standard PC memory cards and transferred directly to a PC.

  • Skill level. Certified welders are increasingly hard to find. A certified welder is not required to operate orbital welding equipment; either a skilled engineer with some welding training or a semiskilled welder can operate an orbital welding machine.

Quality Assurance

For the purpose of quality assurance, the ability to record a data log file is a standard feature on most state-of-the-art equipment.

Image
Figure 1
Orbital welding machines can log gas type, gas flow rate, tungsten electrode type, tungsten electrode grind angle, and filler materials for each welding procedure.

Processing plants usually ask contractors for weld mapping on pipework, and this is easier to control with modern equipment. A unique weld number is assigned to each weld made. Alternatively, accumulative data logging may be used. Each log file (see Figure 1) gives the date, time, weld number, comments, and real-time parameter details for easy referencing after completion of a contract.

Log files can be printed weld by weld or stored on a PC card and transferred to a PC for filing. It is becoming a common practice for contractors to store all procedures for an entire job and then copy the log files to a CD to present to the client when the contract is completed.

The machines contain not only weld schedules but full weld procedures. These include welding parameters and details about the application specification.

Internal Gas Purge

Most orbital welding applications require an inert gas. The gas, which surrounds the molten weld pool and the electrode during the welding process, prevents oxidation or contamination of the weld joint.

Several products are available to help control gas purity and minimize the amount of gas used. Maintaining strict control of the gas enhances the quality of the weld and conserves the purge gas.

For ultrahigh-purity (UHP) applications, gas filters can help supply a clean and pure gas to the weld area.

Other welding accessories localize the area of gas shielding around the weld joint. Gas analyzers let the operator know exactly when the weld cycle can begin and also help to guarantee that gas levels are within specification.

Some analyzers simply plug into the power supply and then take full control of the welding cycle. They can be set to send a signal to the power supply to start welding when the oxygen level is at a suitably low level. They also monitor the gas during welding and either sound an alarm or stop welding if the oxygen level rises too high.

Material Weldability

A tube or pipe's end-use requirements—including mechanical, thermal, stability, and corrosion resistance—dictate material selection. Complex applications may require significant testing to ensure that the completed product meets life cycle objectives.

Different batches of the same material can have slightly different concentrations of alloying and trace elements. Trace elements can cause the conductivity and melting characteristics of each batch to vary.

Image
Figure 2
Low sulfur content (0.001 to 0.008 percent) has a negative surface tension temperature coefficient, which results in a wide, shallow weld profile (left side of illustration). Normal sulfur content (0.009 to 0.030 percent) has a positive surface tension temperature coefficient, which results in a narrow, deep weld profile.

Minor variations in the amounts of sulfur can have a dramatic effect on the fluid flow in the weld pool, changing the weld profile and causing the arc to wander (see Figure 2). These variations also affect the amount of penetration, a phenomenon called the Marangoni effect.

When operators change from one batch of material to the next, it is important that they make a test coupon for the new batch. As in manual welding, a minor amperage adjustment usually is required to return the weld to its original profile.

Weld Joint Fit-up

Weld joint fit-up depends on specification requirements for tube straightness and acceptable weld concavity, reinforcement, and drop-through. If no specification is stated, the laws of physics dictate the molten material flow and compensate for tube mismatch and any gap in the joint.

Tubing is produced according to tolerances that are tight or loose depending on the tube's end use. It is important that the wall thickness is consistent at the weld joint from part to part. Differences in tube diameter or out-of-roundness will cause weld joint mismatch and arc gap variations from one welding setup to another.

Some tube preparation machines can produce a perfectly square end with burr-free inside and outside surfaces ready for orbital welding. This equipment is essential in applications that require weld joint repeatability.

When two tubes are butted together for welding, two main considerations are mismatch and gaps. In general, the following rules apply:

  • Any gap should be less than 5 percent of the wall thickness. Gaps that are 10 percent (or more) of the wall thickness may be weldable, but they cause weld quality to suffer and pose a significant challenge to repeatability.
  • Wall thickness variations at the weld zone should be ±5 percent of the nominal wall thickness. The laws of physics allow welding with mismatch of up to 25 percent of wall thickness if this is the only challenge. However, this also causes weld quality to deteriorate and decreases repeatability.
  • Engineering stands and clamps help align the tubes and decrease or prevent misalignment. These components also eliminate the need for the orbital weld head to align the tubes.

Future Developments

While orbital welding equipment cannot perform every welding job or replace skilled welders, it fills a niche in the welding industry and helps to ease the shortage of qualified welders. As technology advances and equipment and software become more sophisticated, orbital welding will continue to improve in productivity, quality, and consistency.

About the Author

Steve Purnell

Sales Manager

P.O. Box 416 Welbeck Way

Peterborough, PE7 3FT

49-6408-90260