Contour & Finishing Symbols
Contour symbols specify the required weld surface shape: flush, convex, or concave. Seven finishing designator letters (G/M/C/H/P/R/U) indicate the mechanical method when required. Per A2.4 Clause 6.13, designators specify method only. D1.1 Table 8.1 governs weld profile acceptance criteria for structural steel.
7 Finishing Designator Letters
When a specific mechanical finishing method is required after welding, the designator letter is placed next to the contour symbol. Per §6.13.2, these designators specify the method only — not the quality or surface roughness of the finish.
| Letter | Finishing Method | Common Use |
|---|---|---|
| G | Grinding | Most common — CJP groove welds at moment connections, fatigue-critical joints |
| M | Machining | Precision surfaces — bearing seats, rotating equipment |
| C | Chipping | Removing slag or excess weld metal with pneumatic chisel |
| H | Hammering | Peening operations — stress relief in specific applications |
| P | Planishing | Smoothing with a flat-faced tool — sheet metal applications |
| R | Rolling | Rolling to smooth or cold-work the surface |
| U | Unspecified | Mechanical finishing required, method at fabricator’s discretion (§6.13.3) |
Groove Weld Contour Applications
A2.4 Figure 7.15 shows three practical applications of contour and finishing symbols on groove welds:
CWI Exam Tip: The contour symbol is placed on top of the weld symbol, not beside it. When no finishing letter is shown, the contour may be achieved by welding technique alone. The letter G (grinding) is the most commonly tested finishing designator on the CWI exam.