Preheat Heat Input Fillet Weld Size Deposition Rate Carbon Equivalent
AWS D1.1:2025 · Table 5.11 · Category C

A1066 Gr.60/65 Preheat for FCAW — 1-1/2" to 2-1/2"

Minimum preheat and interpass temperature for A1066 Gr.60/65 welded with FCAW at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2" thickness, per AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11.

Minimum Preheat & Interpass Temperature
225°F / 110°C
Category C
Low-hydrogen SMAW, SAW, GMAW, or FCAW process (higher-strength steels)
AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11, §5.7
Reference tool. Verify against project-applicable edition and Engineer-approved WPS.

FCAW (Flux Cored Arc Welding)

FCAW uses tubular flux-cored wire, available gas-shielded (E71T-1) or self-shielded (E71T-8) for field work. Category B in Table 5.11.

High-strength FCAW wires such as E81T1-K2 and E91T1-K2 provide tensile matching for Category C steels. The flux system in these wires is formulated for low diffusible hydrogen, often meeting H8 supplementary limits when tested per AWS A4.3. Wire storage requires climate-controlled conditions similar to SMAW electrodes to prevent moisture absorption.

A1066 Gr.60/65

ASTM A1066 Grades 60 (60 ksi yield, 75 ksi tensile) and 65 (65 ksi yield, 80 ksi tensile) are higher-strength low-alloy plates used in bridges and structural applications requiring both strength and toughness at sub-zero temperatures. They fall under Category C for standard low-hydrogen processes, reflecting their higher CE-IIW of approximately 0.44-0.50, and qualify for Category E reduced preheat (50°F up to 1”, 120°F above 1”) with H8-certified consumables. The dual-path preheat option (Category C standard vs. Category E with H8) gives fabricators economic flexibility — choosing H8 consumables adds a small material premium but can save significant preheating time and fuel cost on thick-section joints. Both grades are produced in plate thicknesses up to 6" and require ASTM supplementary toughness requirements for bridge or offshore service.

Why This Preheat for A1066 Gr.60/65 with FCAW

Higher-strength 60/65 ksi HSLA plate for bridges with H8 preheat option. The higher strength level of this steel places it in Category C of Table 5.11, which carries elevated preheat requirements compared to Category B grades. At 225°F minimum with FCAW, the preheat ensures the cooling rate stays slow enough to prevent hydrogen-induced cracking in this higher-hardenability material. Category C steels demand careful attention to interpass temperature control throughout the weld sequence.

Typical Applications for A1066 Gr.60/65

Specified for long-span bridge plate girder flanges, cable-stayed deck plates, offshore wind monopile transition pieces, heavy-wall tubular joints in jacket structures, and demanding structural applications requiring both 60+ ksi yield and sub-zero toughness. The H8 preheat reduction to Category E (50°F up to 1", 120°F above 1") makes these grades economically competitive for heavy plate fabrication where heating thick sections adds hours to the welding cycle. Plate thicknesses in offshore monopile transition pieces can reach 4" or more, with individual circumferential seams requiring sustained preheating over several hours. The combination of high strength, toughness, and H8 preheat eligibility positions A1066 Gr.60/65 as a premium alternative to conventional plate grades in demanding offshore environments. Filler metal selection must achieve tensile matching (80+ ksi) while meeting CVN requirements at the service temperature — typically -4°F to -40°F for North Sea and US Gulf offshore installations.

Why Preheat Matters at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2"

Heavy plate with significant restraint and thermal mass — preheat is critical to maintain slow cooling for hydrogen escape.

Category C Preheat for A1066 Gr.60/65

Category C in Table 5.11 applies to higher-strength steels where the combination of hardenability and residual stress requires elevated preheat. For A1066 Gr.60/65 at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2", the 225°F minimum preheat slows the weld cooling rate to prevent formation of crack-susceptible martensite in the heat-affected zone. Maintaining interpass temperature at or above this minimum is especially critical for multi-pass welds on restrained joints.

Other Steels with FCAW at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2"

SteelCategoryPreheat
A36B150°F (65°C)
A53 Gr.BB150°F (65°C)
A106 Gr.BB150°F (65°C)
A633 Gr.EC225°F (110°C)

Try Different Combinations

Use the interactive preheat calculator to look up any steel, process, and thickness combination from D1.1:2025 Table 5.11.

What is the minimum preheat for A1066 Gr.60/65 with FCAW at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2"?
For A1066 Gr.60/65 welded with FCAW at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2" thickness, the minimum preheat temperature is 225°F (110°C) per AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11, Category C. This is also the minimum interpass temperature — the joint must not cool below 225°F between passes.
What Table 5.11 category applies to A1066 Gr.60/65 with FCAW?
A1066 Gr.60/65 welded with FCAW falls under Category C in AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11. Low-hydrogen SMAW, SAW, GMAW, or FCAW process (higher-strength steels). At 1-1/2" to 2-1/2" thickness, this category requires a minimum preheat of 225°F (110°C).
Why is preheat 225°F for A1066 Gr.60/65 at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2"?
The 225°F preheat for A1066 Gr.60/65 at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2" with FCAW reflects the combination of the steel's hardenability and the increased restraint at this thickness. Higher preheat slows the cooling rate in the heat-affected zone, giving diffusible hydrogen more time to escape before the steel transforms to a crack-susceptible microstructure.
What happens if I skip preheat on thick plate?
Without adequate preheat on material in the 1-1/2” to 2-1/2” range, the weld HAZ cools rapidly, trapping diffusible hydrogen in a hardened microstructure. This creates conditions for hydrogen-induced cracking (also called cold cracking or delayed cracking), which may not appear until hours or days after welding. Table 5.11 preheat minimums are set to prevent this failure mode.

D1.1:2025 reference data. Not affiliated with AWS.