beautypg.com

Sources of additional information, Warning – health & safety notice, Important – Lincoln Electric Welder User Manual

Page 37

background image

35

SOURCES OF
ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION

Additional information on the welding
of stainless steels can be obtained
from the sources listed below:

The Welding Handbook

7th Edition, Volume 4, Chapter 2 –
American Welding Society

ANSI/AWS D10.4

Recommended Practices for
Welding Austenitic Stainless Steel
Piping and Tubing – American
Welding Society

AWS – A4.2

Standard Procedures for
Calibrating Magnetic Instruments
to Measure the Delta Ferrite
Content of Austenitic and Duplex
Ferritic-Austenitic Stainless Steel
Weld Metal – American Welding
Society

AWS – A5.4

Specification for Stainless Steel
Electrodes for Shielded Metal Arc
Welding – American Welding
Society

AWS – A5.9

Specification for Bare Stainless
Steel Welding Electrodes and
Rods – American Welding Society

AWS – A5.22

Specification Stainless Steel
Electrodes for Flux-Cored Arc
Welding and Stainless Steel Cored
Rods for Gas Tungsten Arc
Welding – American Welding
Society

AWS – A5.30

Specification for Consumable
Inserts – American Welding
Society

ASM Metals Handbook

Volume 6 – Welding and Brazing –
8th Edition – ASM International

ASM Metals Handbook

Volume 6 – Welding, Brazing and
Soldering – 9th Edition – ASM
International

AWS – FMC

Filler Metal Comparison Charts –
American Welding Society

Literature from filler metal
manufacturers:

ASM Metals Handbook

Volume 1 – Properties and
Selection of Metals, 8th Edition –
ASM International

ASM Metals Handbook

Volume 3 – Properties and
Selection of Stainless Steels, Tool
Materials and Special Purpose
Metals, 9th Edition – ASM
International

The Making, Shaping and Treating
of Steel

10th Edition, United States Steel
Corporation

ANSI – Z49.1

Safety in Welding, Cutting and
Allied Processes – American
Welding Society

Welding Metallurgy of Stainless
Steels

by Erich Folkhard, Springer -
Verlag, New York

WARNING –
HEALTH & SAFETY
NOTICE

Protect yourself and others. Read
and understand the label provided
with filler material for welding.

FUMES AND GASES can be
dangerous to your health. ARC RAYS
can injure eyes and burn skin.
ELECTRIC SHOCK can kill.

• Read and understand the

manufacturer’s instructions and
your employer’s safety practices.

• Keep your head out of the fumes.

• Use enough ventilation, exhaust at

the arc, or both, to keep fumes
and gases away from your

breathing zone and the general
area.

• Wear correct eye, ear and body

protection.

• Do not touch live electrical parts

or permit electrically live parts or
electrodes to contact skin or your
clothing or gloves if they are wet.

• Insulate yourself from work and

ground.

IMPORTANT:

Special ventilation and/or exhaust
are required when welding high
chromium alloys such as stainless
steels.

Fumes from the normal use of
stainless steel filler materials contain
significant quantities of chromium
compounds. The (TLV) Threshold
Limit Value for chromium (0.5 mg/m

3

)

and/or chromium VI (0.05 mg/m

3

)

will be exceeded before reaching the
5.0 mg/m

3

maximum exposure

guideline for total welding fume.

BEFORE USING, READ AND
UNDERSTAND THE MATERIAL
SAFETY DATA SHEET (MSDS)* FOR
THE FILLER MATERIAL TO BE
USED.

• See American National Standard

Z49.1, Safety in Welding, Cutting
and Allied Processes
, published
by the American Welding Society,
550 N.W. LeJeune Road, Miami,
Florida 33126;
OSHA Safety and Health
Standards, 29 CFR 1910,
available from the U.S.
Government Printing Office,
Washington, DC 20402-0001

* Available from

The Lincoln Electric Company
(for Lincoln products)
22801 St. Clair Avenue
Cleveland, Ohio 44117