AWS D1.1:2025 · Table 5.11 · Category B

A709 Gr.50 Preheat for SAW — 3/4" to 1-1/2"

Minimum preheat and interpass temperature for A709 Gr.50 welded with SAW at 3/4" to 1-1/2" thickness, per AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11.

Built on AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11 — every value traced to the clause.

Minimum Preheat & Interpass Temperature
50°F / 10°C
Category B Low-hydrogen SMAW, SAW, GMAW, or FCAW process
AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11, §5.7
Reference tool. Verify against project-applicable edition and Engineer-approved WPS.

Have a preheat question? Ask Flux

SAW (Submerged Arc Welding)

SAW submerges the arc beneath granular flux for highest deposition rates, flat/horizontal only. Category B in Table 5.11.

SAW with F7A2-EM12K wire/flux delivers the highest deposition rates for flat-position fillet welds on building steel. Typical parameters: 500-700 amps, 28-32 volts, 18-30 IPM travel speed. Flux consumption runs approximately equal to wire consumption by weight. Unfused flux recovery and recycling systems are standard in production shops to control consumable costs.

SAW Tips for Common Structural Steels

For A709 Grade 50 bridge steel (50 ksi yield, Category B only), SAW is the dominant process for plate girder web-to-flange continuous fillet welds — a 100-foot girder requires 200+ feet of fillet weld per girder (two sides), making SAW deposition rates of 15–35 lb/hr transformative for production. F7A2-EM12K at 600–750 A with a column-and-boom manipulator handles these long seams.

Typical values for reference — always verify against your approved WPS and electrode manufacturer data.

Why SAW for A709 Gr.50 at 3/4" to 1-1/2"

Why SAW for A709 Gr.50 at 3/4" to 1-1/2"? SAW delivers 15-40 lb/hr deposition — the highest deposition rate among available processes. Position capability: flat and horizontal only. Suitability: shop only.

A709 Gr.50

ASTM A709 Grade 50 is the standard bridge plate and shape grade with 50 ksi minimum yield and 65 ksi minimum tensile, commonly specified for highway bridge plate girder flanges, webs, floor beams, and cross-frames. It falls under Category B only in Table 5.11, requiring low-hydrogen welding processes. Chemistry mirrors A572 Gr.50 (0.23% max carbon, Nb/V microalloying) with CVN testing per AASHTO temperature zone requirements. A709 Gr.50 accounts for the majority of bridge steel tonnage in North America. Flange plate thicknesses routinely reach 2-3" on large plate girders, making preheat compliance at the upper Table 5.11 tiers a significant production consideration for bridge fabrication shops during cold-weather operations.

Why This Preheat for A709 Gr.50 with SAW

Standard 50 ksi bridge plate for girders and cross-frames. This steel is prequalified only with low-hydrogen processes under Table 5.11. With SAW, the submerged arc process with granular flux produces controlled hydrogen levels, with flux condition being the primary variable. The 50°F minimum preheat balances the steel’s strength level and carbon equivalent against the hydrogen control provided by SAW. Non-low-hydrogen SMAW is not an option for this grade under D1.1 prequalified WPS.

Typical Applications for A709 Gr.50

Standard for highway bridge plate girder flanges, box girder webs, cross-frame angles, bearing sole plates, splice plates in bolted-welded connections, and composite deck studs. A709 Gr.50 is the baseline strength grade for most modern highway bridge design per AASHTO LRFD. Flange butt splices, web-to-flange continuous fillet welds, and bearing stiffener clips are the dominant weld types in girder fabrication. Girder flanges typically range from 3/4" to 3" thick with widths from 12" to 30", requiring extended preheat soak times on thicker flange splices. Bridge fabrication shops certified to AISC Major Steel Bridge category maintain dedicated preheat tracking logs for each flange splice throughout the production sequence. Web-to-flange fillet welds on plate girders often exceed 100 feet of continuous weld per girder, making SAW the standard process for these joints. Flange splice CJP groove welds undergo 100% UT examination per D1.5.

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 SAW at 3/4" to 1-1/2"

SteelCategoryPreheat
A36B50°F (10°C)
A633 Gr.EC150°F (65°C)
A709 HPS70WC150°F (65°C)
A710 Gr.AC150°F (65°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 A709 Gr.50 with SAW at 3/4" to 1-1/2"?
When welding A709 Gr.50 at 3/4" to 1-1/2" using SAW, the minimum preheat temperature is 50°F (10°C) per AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11, Category B. SAW places this combination in Category B. This is also the minimum interpass temperature — the joint must not cool below 50°F between passes.
What Table 5.11 category applies to A709 Gr.50 with SAW?
When using SAW on A709 Gr.50, the combination falls under Category B in AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11. Low-hydrogen SMAW, SAW, GMAW, or FCAW process. At 3/4" to 1-1/2" thickness, Category B with SAW requires a minimum preheat of 50°F (10°C).
Why does preheat increase at 3/4 inch?
Below 3/4”, the thin section sheds heat and hydrogen quickly. Above 3/4”, the thicker material acts as a heat sink, cooling the HAZ faster and trapping diffusible hydrogen at crack-susceptible grain boundaries. Table 5.11 raises the minimum preheat at this threshold to slow the cooling rate and give hydrogen more time to diffuse out of the weld zone.

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