Welding Procedures; Out-Of-Position Welding (Vertical And Overhead) - Lincoln Electric Stick Electrode Welding C2.410 Manual

Stick electrode welding guide
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WELDING PROCEDURES

Out-Of-Position Welding (Vertical and Overhead)

When welding out-of-position, the molten metal tends to spill out
of the joint. To offset this tendency, an electrode with a fast
freezing deposit is needed.
Welding made with out-of-position electrodes is slow, relatively
expensive and require a high degree of operator skill. Therefore,
whenever possible, work should be positioned for downhand
welding using High-Deposition electrodes - see pages 8-15.
Procedures
Vertical Up Groove Welds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 6
Vertical Down Welds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 6
Vertical Up Fillet Welds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 7
Overhead Fillet Welds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 7
For vertical up and vertical down pipe welding technique,
request Lincoln bulletin C2.420, Welding Pressure Pipelines.
Alternate Electrodes
Vertical, overhead, and horizontal groove welds on plate thicker
than 1/2" are most economically done with low hydrogen
electrodes - see pages 24-34.
Vertical Up vs. Vertical Down
Vertical down is recommended for fastest welding of 18 gauge
to 3/16" thick steel. A description of the recommended drag
technique along with sheet metal procedures are given in the
section High-Speed Welding on pages 18-23.
Vertical up techniques provide deeper penetration and lower
overall welding costs on plate over 3/16" thick.
Electrode, Current and Polarity
The vertical up and overhead procedures in this section
recommend 3/16" and smaller Fleetweld 5P or 5P+ (E6010)
electrode using electrode positive and currents in the lower
portion of the electrode's range. When only AC otuput is
available, use Fleetweld 35 or Fleetweld 180 (E6011) electrode at
about 10% higher current.
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