Want stronger welded H-beam connections? In this article we explain need to know welding terms useful for weld preparation for H-beams.

 

Welding Terminology

There is often much confusion in beam welding terminology. Below are some of these terms explained.

Intersection geometry

Skew

Acute angle between member axes in the horizontal plane.

Slope

Acute angle between member axes in a vertical plane. Also called ‘inclination’.

Shape

Actual geometry to create the end cut, cut-out or hole for a proper fit.

 

Weld Preparation

Groove angle φ

The angle between opposing faces of the connected parts which create a groove to be filled up with weld materials. Can be an inside or outside groove angle for weld preparation.

Bevel angle β

The angle formed between a centerline perpendicular to the wall and the cut face of the wall. Equal to cutting angle and can be negative or positive.

  • A perpendicular cut has β=0°;
  • Largest β plasma 45° (- or +).

Strong H-beam connections, Bevel angle max

Dihedral angle ψ

Angle between the outer faces of the connected walls. Calculations for optimal weld preparation are based on ψ.

Root opening (R)

The separation at the joint between the walls after fitting. Technique to increase the joint penetration for stronger connections.

Root joint detail H beam connections

Rathole

An opening in the web right under the flange to achieve complete flange joint penetration and allow nondestructive tests. Read more about ratholes below

Weld types

  • Fillet weld
  • Groove weld
  • Butt weld

Weld types for welded H-beam connections

 

Guide to weld preparation for welded H-beam connections

HGG develops beam cutting machines to cut copes and weld preparation with a wide variety of bevel types.

Bevel cutting

None

Preferred in case of bolted connections or to apply fillet welds.

H beam weld preparation no groove

Single groove

Bevel cut for groove weld. Weld preparation on top side or bottom side.

top-groove Bevel cutting single groove

Single groove with nose

Bevel cut for groove weld with broad root face. Weld preparation on top side or bottom side.

top-groove-with-nose Bottom groove with nose

Double groove

X-bevel cut for X or K groove welds. Small root face can be applied after cutting.

Double groove

Double groove with nose

X-bevel cut for X or K groove welds with broad root face.

double side groove with nose

 

Ratholes

This open hole in the web right up against the flange allows continuous weld passes on flange joints across the web with complete joint penetration. The necessary reduction in the web brings avoidance of defects like discontinuities, inclusions and incomplete penetration of the passes. Ratholes enable nondestructive testing of the full joint. Depending on the contract documents and included welding regulations a fabricator can choose not to apply ratholes. This avoids reduction of the web but possible defects that cannot be tested need to be taken into account during strength calculation.

None
No reduction in web section for full strength. Nondestructive tests of welds located across the web are not possible.

None-P Beam profiling no ratholes None-N

Type 1
Traditional rathole. The required torch to flange distance for web cuts requires a minimum of grinding.

Ratholes type 1 Rathole-type-1-F Rathole-type-1-N

Type 6
HGG optimised rathole. No grinding required.

Rathole-type-6-P HGG optimised rathole Rathole-type-6-N

AWS 6.2
Weld inspection hole for seismic moment connections (CAD-CAM only).

Weld inspection hole

 

A practical example

The examples below help you to understand the structure of this document. Cuts are available for end shapes, holes and cut-outs. Four cuts are needed to define a beam end shape. Top flange, top web, bottom web and bottom flange. The weld preparation is shown on the right side of the cut.

Most used profiling shapes beam coping, example 2 welded H-beam connections

A welded beam to beam connection, fully fixed for high performance steel structures.

 

Most used profiling shapes beam coping, example 3 welded H-beam connections

A welded beam to beam connection, pinned with snipe for supporting members in high performance steel structures.

See more examples in the article ‘The 7 Most Used Beam Connections Explained’.

 

Find out more about welded H-beam connections

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