A53 Gr.B Preheat for SMAW (low-hydrogen) — 3/4" to 1-1/2"
Minimum preheat and interpass temperature for A53 Gr.B welded with SMAW (low-hydrogen) at 3/4" to 1-1/2" thickness, per AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11.
Low-hydrogen SMAW, SAW, GMAW, or FCAW process
SMAW (Low-Hydrogen)
Low-hydrogen SMAW (E7018/E7016) uses basic-coated electrodes requiring rod oven storage, assigned to Category B in Table 5.11.
E7018 is the default electrode for structural fillet and groove welds on common building steels. Rod ovens should hold at a minimum of 250°F per D1.1 Clause 7.3.2.1; exposure time out of the oven is limited to 4 hours maximum per Table 7.1. For overhead position, use 3/32" diameter rods to control puddle size. Vertical-up stringer beads provide the best fusion on thicker members.
A53 Gr.B
ASTM A53 Grade B is a standard specification for welded (Type E/ERW and Type S/seamless) steel pipe used in mechanical and pressure applications, with a minimum yield of 35 ksi and 60 ksi minimum tensile strength. It shares chemistry similar to A36 (0.30% max carbon) and falls into the same Table 5.11 categories (A and B). A53 pipe is produced in nominal sizes from 1/8" through 26" NPS in Schedules 10 through XXH. Grade A (lower strength at 30 ksi yield) is also produced but Grade B dominates structural and mechanical service. The ERW weld seam has different properties than the base metal, which affects the heat-affected zone behavior during field welding adjacent to the seam.
Why This Preheat for A53 Gr.B with SMAW-LH
Welded and seamless pipe for mechanical and pressure service at 35 ksi yield. With low-hydrogen SMAW-LH, this combination falls under Category B rather than Category A, reflecting the lower hydrogen potential of the consumable. The 50°F minimum preheat is lower than what non-low-hydrogen SMAW would require at the same thickness. Low-hydrogen electrodes and inherently low-hydrogen wire processes reduce the driving force for hydrogen-induced cracking in the heat-affected zone.
Typical Applications for A53 Gr.B
Found in pipe columns supporting mezzanines, canopy posts, bollard barriers, sprinkler risers, mechanical chase framing, handrail tubing in industrial plants, and fence line posts. A53 pipe columns in light commercial buildings typically use fillet welds to cap plates and base plates with E70XX electrodes. In parking structures, A53 serves as guard rail posts welded to embed plates. Most A53 pipe comes in Schedule 40 wall thickness (0.237" on 2" NPS, 0.280" on 4" NPS), and typical column sizes range from 4" to 12" nominal pipe size. Joints at base plates often use a 1/4" fillet all-around with a 3/8" tack followed by a continuous pass. Cut ends are squared on a band saw or beveled for butt joints on larger diameters. Field fit-up on pipe columns requires checking plumbness before tacking, as round sections rotate freely and cannot self-align like W-shapes against shear plates.
Why Preheat Matters at 3/4" to 1-1/2"
Preheat climbs at this range as thicker material slows heat dissipation, trapping hydrogen at crack-susceptible grain boundaries.
Other Steels with SMAW (low-hydrogen) at 3/4" to 1-1/2"
| Steel | Category | Preheat |
|---|---|---|
| A36 | B | 50°F (10°C) |
| A633 Gr.E | C | 150°F (65°C) |
| A709 HPS70W | C | 150°F (65°C) |
| A710 Gr.A | C | 150°F (65°C) |
A53 Gr.B with SMAW (low-hydrogen)
Try Different Combinations
Use the interactive preheat calculator to look up any steel, process, and thickness combination from D1.1:2025 Table 5.11.
A53 Gr.B Welding Guides
D1.1:2025 reference data. Not affiliated with AWS.