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Welding Drawings

Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

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Page 1: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

Welding Drawings

Page 2: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

Why welding drawings?

• Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project.– Owner– Architect and Engineer– Fabrication shop

• Estimators and Purchasing agents• Fitters• Welders• Inspectors

Page 3: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

What are welding drawings?

• Drawings are the language of building and manufacturing.

• They are pictorially based and conform to accepted standards and symbols.

• Integrate job and company specific formats with national standard code symbols.

• Provides an expectedly consistent communication of ideas.

Page 4: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

Typical Drawing

Page 5: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

Materials correspond with numbers on drawing.

Typical drawing detail.

Welding symbols.

Different Views

Page 6: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –
Page 7: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

• Welding symbols are built using a formula to place the different elements.

• When the symbol refers to only one member, the arrow will have a noticeable break and point to that member (Detail 1)

• Welding symbols may be combined either by adding different elements onto one reference line, or by adding more reference lines to the arrow (Details 2 & 3).

• When more reference lines are added, the operations on the line closest to the arrow are performed first, operations farthest from the line are performed last (Detail 3).

Page 8: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

Frequently Used Symbol Elements For Structural

Welding

Page 9: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

Symbol for Fillet Weld

Note the difference between “This Side”

and “Other Side”

Page 10: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

Symbol for Fillet Weld

Page 11: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

Symbol for Fillet Weld

Page 12: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

Symbol for Butt Weld

Page 13: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

Symbol for Butt Weld

Page 14: Welding Drawings. Why welding drawings? Drawings are needed to share information with others involved in the project. –Owner –Architect and Engineer –

Symbol for Butt Weld