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

A710 Gr.A Preheat for FCAW (H8) — all thicknesses

Minimum preheat and interpass temperature for A710 Gr.A welded with FCAW (H8) at all thicknesses thickness, per AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11.

Minimum Preheat & Interpass Temperature
32°F / 0°C
Category D
H8-certified consumables — reduced preheat for all thicknesses
AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11, §5.7
When base metal temperature is below 32°F [0°C], preheat to minimum 70°F [20°C] and maintain during welding (Table 5.11 footnote a).
This page shows preheat with H8-certified consumables. The H8 designation means the electrode or flux deposits no more than 8 mL of diffusible hydrogen per 100g of deposited weld metal, tested per AWS A4.3. Using H8-certified consumables qualifies certain high-strength steels for reduced preheat categories in AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11. Check your electrode packaging for the H8 designator.
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.

A710 Gr.A

ASTM A710 Grade A is a precipitation-hardened low-carbon steel plate achieving high strength through copper precipitation rather than carbon content. Class 2 (65 ksi yield, age-hardened at mill) and Class 3 (75 ksi yield, precipitation-hardened after fabrication) both feature very low carbon (0.07% max) producing a CE-IIW of approximately 0.32-0.38 — among the lowest of any high-strength steel. Table 5.11 assigns Category C for standard low-hydrogen processes and the reduced Category D preheat (32°F all thicknesses) with H8-certified consumables, reflecting the exceptional hydrogen cracking resistance of this ultra-low-carbon metallurgy. The precipitation hardening mechanism means weld thermal cycles can alter the strength in the HAZ depending on peak temperature and cooling rate, requiring attention to heat input control during procedure qualification.

Why This Preheat for A710 Gr.A with FCAW

Precipitation-hardened low-carbon plate with multiple category paths. Using H8-certified consumables with FCAW qualifies this combination for Category D in Table 5.11, which assigns 32°F minimum preheat across all thicknesses. The H8 designation limits diffusible hydrogen to 8 mL per 100g of deposited weld metal. Combined with the inherent crack resistance of this steel, the low hydrogen input eliminates the need for thickness-dependent preheat increases.

Typical Applications for A710 Gr.A

Found in naval hull plates, military vehicle armor brackets, offshore platform node connections, heavy-lift crane boom sections, and mine hoist drum shells. A710 Gr.A precipitation-hardened plate offers a rare combination of high strength and exceptional weldability at low carbon equivalent (CE-IIW approximately 0.32-0.38). The multiple thickness-dependent category paths (B, C, and D with H8) reflect its complex metallurgical response to different section sizes. Class 2 plate is age-hardened at the mill through a controlled thermal cycle, while Class 3 achieves higher strength through precipitation hardening after welding, which makes it particularly suitable for applications where extensive welding occurs before final strengthening. The distinction between Class 2 and Class 3 response to weld thermal cycles requires careful attention during procedure qualification. Plate thicknesses up to 6" are available but procurement requires extended lead times due to limited production volume.

Why Preheat Matters at all thicknesses

Category D assigns a flat 32°F minimum at all thicknesses — the steel's crack resistance plus H8 hydrogen control eliminates thickness-based increases.

H8-Certified Consumables for A710 Gr.A

The H8 supplementary designator on a consumable classification (e.g., E7018-H8) certifies that the electrode deposits no more than 8 mL of diffusible hydrogen per 100g of deposited weld metal, tested per AWS A4.3. For A710 Gr.A, using H8 consumables qualifies for Category D with reduced preheat of 32°F at all thicknesses thickness. Verify the H8 designator on electrode packaging or manufacturer certification before claiming the reduced preheat category.

Other Steels with FCAW (H8) at all thicknesses

SteelCategoryPreheat
A913 Gr.50/60/65D32°F (0°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 A710 Gr.A with FCAW at all thicknesses?
For A710 Gr.A welded with FCAW (H8) at all thicknesses thickness, the minimum preheat temperature is 32°F (0°C) per AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11, Category D. This is also the minimum interpass temperature — the joint must not cool below 32°F between passes.
What Table 5.11 category applies to A710 Gr.A with FCAW?
A710 Gr.A welded with FCAW (H8) falls under Category D in AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11. H8-certified consumables — reduced preheat for all thicknesses. At all thicknesses thickness, this category requires a minimum preheat of 32°F (0°C).
Does A710 Gr.A need preheat at all thicknesses?
At all thicknesses thickness with FCAW (H8), the minimum preheat is 32°F (0°C) — effectively ambient temperature above freezing. No active preheating is required unless the base metal is below 32°F. Per Table 5.11 footnote (a), if working below freezing, preheat to at least 70°F (20°C) and maintain during welding.
What does H8 mean for welding A710 Gr.A?
The H8 supplementary designator certifies that the consumable deposits no more than 8 mL of diffusible hydrogen per 100g of deposited weld metal. For A710 Gr.A, using H8-certified FCAW consumables qualifies for Category D with 32°F preheat at all thicknesses, which may be lower than the standard low-hydrogen category.
Why is preheat the same at all thicknesses?
Category D is unique in Table 5.11 — it applies a flat 32°F (0°C) minimum at any thickness. This reflects the combination of steels with inherently high resistance to hydrogen cracking and consumables certified to very low hydrogen levels. No thickness-based increase is needed because the cracking risk stays below the threshold even in heavy sections.

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