Thanks Mr. KG.
Thanks & regards
-- This I know but anyway good explanation.
My actual question was related to the specific line interpretation of the ASTM A182. Its clear now.
Thanks & regards
Sandeep Kumar
On Wednesday, February 13, 2019 at 7:06:46 AM UTC+3, kannayeram gnanapandithan wrote:
On Wednesday, February 13, 2019 at 7:06:46 AM UTC+3, kannayeram gnanapandithan wrote:
ASTM NO No Of Grains/square mm at 100X Remarks1 upto 1-1/22 1 1/2-33 3-64 6-125 12-24The above are having coarse grain which is best for creep resistance because of less grain boundary6. 24-487 48-968 96 and overThe above are having fine grain Which is best for mechanical properties because more grain more strengthhope that it is clear now.THANKS & BEST REGARDS,KG.PANDITHAN, BE, IWE, CSWIP 3.1,ISO 9712 Level 2 in VT,ASNT-Level II in PT,MT,RT & UT,LA ISO 9001-2015,International Welding Engineer.CONSULTANT-WELDING & QUALITYMobile no: +919940739349On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 7:45 AM ishwar kumar <ish...@gmail.com> wrote:1,2,3,4,5 Coarse grain and 6,7,8 fine grain--On 12-Feb-2019, at 6:18 PM, sandeep kumar <sandeep...@gmail.com> wrote:Hi RaminPlease note, my question is what does mean the coarse?a higher ASTM no or smaller no.Thanks.
On Monday, February 11, 2019 at 5:24:06 AM UTC+3, Ramin Kondori wrote:This number is related to the Number of grains in an specific area.higher number of grains means they are smaller grains or fine grain.Ramin KondoriSr. QA/QC & Welding Engineer----------------------------------------------------------- PG-Dip. in Welding Engineering (IWE AT 0070)BSc. in Civil Engineering (IUT)BGAS Painting InspectorASNT Level I&IIDear allPlease advise your views on below query:ASTM A182 10.1.2 Grades F 321H, F 347H, and F 348H shall have agrain size of ASTM No. 7 or coarser.What does it stand for coarser?Does it mean a higher ASTM grain size no (e.g. 8, 9 and so on) or lower ASTM grain size no. (e.g. 6, 5, 4 and so on)?Thanks & regardsSandeep--
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