Maintenance Welding

Maintenance Welding

For Joining Difficult To Weld High-Carbon Steels And Dissimilar Metal Combination When No Exact Specification Of The Base Metal Exists

NSN-312


CLASSIFICATION

AWS A5.4 E312-16 | EN ISO 3581-A E 29 9 R | JIS Z 3221 D312-16

PRODUCT DESCRIPTION

A metallurgically based rutile flux with balanced additions of chemically basic and amphoteric minerals that deposits duplex weld metal containing some 40% delta ferrite and 60% austenite. The flux is extruded onto a fully alloyed 29Cr 9Ni core wire using a blend of silicates that ensures both coating strength and resistance to subsequent moisture absorption.

WELDING FEATURES OF THE ELECTRODE

This unique flux formulation ensures excellent arc stability, ease of initial arc strike and re-strike, minimal spatter on AC and virtually none on DC+. The resultant weld seams are smooth, evenly rippled and free from undercut while slag detachability is excellent. Metal recovery is some 103% with respect to core wire weight.

APPLICATIONS AND MATERIALS TO BE WELDED

Primarily designed for high carbon steels, cast or wrought, which are well known as difficult to weld or problem steels. The duplex microstructure of the weld metal will tolerate high dilution with such steels while still maintaining its strength ductility and thus resistance to cracking. It can also be used very successfully for joining carbon steels to stainless steels, the only exception to its extensive use on such applications is that at service temperatures above 300ºC a drop in weld metal ductility occurs.

WELDING AMPERAGE AC and DC


OTHER DATA

Electrodes that have become damp should be re-dried at 120oC for 30 minutes.