Shielded Metal Arc Welding
Shielded Metal Arc Welding
Shielded Metal Arc Welding
The brain that contains the problem probably also contains the solution.
Nancy Kline
Introduction
Shielded metal arc welding, AWS designation SMAW, is also commonly called arc welding, stick
welding and stick electrode welding.
Although there had been initial work on arc welding in the 1700s using carbon electrodes powered
by batteries, development intensified between 1880 and 1900 when electric generators replaced
batteries. By the early 1900s Lincoln Electric offered the first arc welding machine, and by 1912
covered electrodes were patented. Arc welding remains an important process for structural steel and
pipeline construction because decision makers in these critical industries choose it for its reliability.
Today, arc welding is also popular for industrial, automotive and farm repair because the equipment
is relatively inexpensive and can be made portable. Although more welders have learned this
process than any other, and its annual filler metal poundage continues to grow, lately it is declining
in importance as the wire feed welding processes continue to gain popularity and market share.
During WWII many shipyard workers and servicemen were trained to use shielded metal arc
welding. After the war the popularity of low-cost transformer welding power supplies like the Lincoln
Electric Company’s “tombstone” enabled these newly trained welders to bring their skills to the farm,
the garage, and to factories.
SMAW Equipment
As shown in Figure 5-1, an SMAW outfit requires:
SMAW Process
SMAW is usually a manual process, but it can be automated. During welding, an electric current
flows between the welding power supply, the electrode, the welding arc, the work, the ground clamp,
the work lead and back to the welding supply. Electrons flowing through the gap between the
electrode and the work produce an arc, or plasma, that furnishes heat to melt both the electrode
metal and the workpiece metal.
Because temperatures within the arc exceed 6000ºF, tiny globules of metal form at the tip of the
electrode, then transfer to the molten weld pool on the work. As the electrode moves away from the
weld pool, the molten mixture of electrode and base metal solidifies, completing the weld.
In the flat or horizontal position, gravity aids electrode metal transfer by gas expansion from the
electrode coating materials, electromagnetic forces and surface tension. In other positions, gravity
opposes these forces.
The electrode is coated with a flux, and heat from the arc causes this flux coating to burn and
decompose. This creates a gaseous shield that protects the electrode tip, the work, and the molten
weld pool from atmospheric contamination. The flux contains materials that coat the molten steel
droplets as they transfer to the weld and become slag after cooling. This slag floats on the weld pool
surface before it solidifies over the weld bead, where it protects the molten metal from exposure to
atmosphere and slows the cooling rate. See Figure 5-2.
Some electrode-flux coatings contain metal powder to provide additional metal filler to increase the
deposition rate.
The electrode flux and metal electrode determine the chemical, electrical, mechanical and
metallurgical properties of the weld as well as the electrode handling characteristics. Only 50% of
the heat furnished by the power supply enters the weld; the rest is lost to radiation, the surrounding
base metal, and to the weld plume.
Figure 5-2. Shielded metal arc process, also called stick welding.
Applications
SMAW can weld the following metals:
Aluminum
Bronze
Carbon steel
Cast iron
Hardfacing alloys
High-strength steels
Low-alloy steels
Malleable iron
Nickel
Stainless steel
Some metals require preheat, postheat, or both to prevent weld bead cracking. Since better
processes exist, not much aluminum welding is done by SMAW.
SMAW welds from 1/16" to unlimited thicknesses are possible. Thicknesses less than 1/8" can be joined
but require much greater skill to prevent the weld from burning through the metal. Thicknesses
over 3/4" are more economically welded by other methods such as FCAW, which deposits metal
faster.
SMAW Advantages
Low cost equipment.
Welds many different metals and alloys, including the most commonly used.
Relatively portable and can be used in confined spaces.
With different current settings and rod diameters, the same equipment can weld metals from 1/8" (16
gauge) to metals several feet thick. There is no upper limit on the thickness of metal that can be
welded with SMAW.
Welds can be performed in any position.
SMAW is less affected by wind and drafts than gas-shielded processes like GMAW and GTAW.
SMAW Disadvantages
Not suitable for metal sheets under 1/8" thick.
Operator duty cycle and overall deposition rate are usually lower with SMAW than with wire-fed
processes because, with SMAW, welding must be stopped when the electrode is consumed and
needs to be replaced.
Not all of the electrode can be used. The remaining stub in the electrode holder must be discarded,
wasting 1–2" of every electrode.
The frequent stops and starts caused by changing electrodes can result in weld defects.
Weather Restrictions
SMAW is not permitted in rain, snow or blowing sand, and when the base metal is below 0°F. But
during these adverse weather conditions, temporary shelters known as dog houses can be erected
around the weld site to allow the welding to proceed. Preheating the weld base metal to 70°F with
rosebud tips permits welding when the outside temperature is below 0°F.