The following relates to the art of electric arc welding and more particularly to an electric arc welding system employing tandem electrodes, an electrode having tandem electrode wires, or the like.
This disclosure relates to an electric arc welding system utilizing power supplies for driving two or more tandem electrodes. Such a system is used, for example, in seam welding of large metal blanks. While substantially any arc welding power supply can be used, the power supplies disclosed in Stava 6,111,216 are suitably used in one embodiment. Stava 6,111,216 is incorporated herein by reference.
The concept of arc welding using tandem electrodes is disclosed, for example, in Stava et al. 6,207,929, in Stava 6,291,798, and in Houston et al. 6,472,634. Patents 6,207,929, 6,291,798, and 6,472,634 are also incorporated herein by reference.
The determination of heat input values in the case of a waveform-controlled welding embodiment is disclosed at least in Hsu, U.S. published application 2003-0071024 A1. U.S. published application 2003-0071024 A1 is also incorporated herein by reference.
Welding applications, such as pipe welding, often require high currents and use several arcs created by tandem electrodes. Such tandem welding systems are described, for example, in Stava 6,207,929 and Stava 6,291,798. Houston 6,472,634 discloses the concept of a single AC arc welding cell for each electrode wherein the cell itself includes one or more paralleled power supplies each of which has its own switching network. The output of the switching network is then combined to drive the electrode. The power supplies can be paralleled to build a high current input to each of several electrodes used in a tandem welding operation.
Stava 6,291,798 discloses a series of tandem electrodes movable along a welding path to lay successive welding beads in the space between the edges of a rolled pipe or the ends of two adjacent pipe sections. The individual AC waveforms are suitably created by a number of current pulses occurring at a frequency of at least 18 kHz with a magnitude of each current pulse controlled by a wave shaper. This technology dates back to Blankenship 5,278,390. In Stava 6,207,929, the frequency of the AC current at adjacent tandem electrodes is adjusted to prevent magnetic interference.
Computation of the heat input in the case of waveform controlled welding is complicated by the complex shape of the voltage and current waveforms. A product of the rms current times the rms voltage provides a measure of the heat input, but such a computation does not take into account the precise shape of the waveform and possible phase offsets between the voltage and current. A generally more accurate method for computing heat input in waveform controlled welding is described in Hsu, U.S. published application 2003-0071024 A1.
One difficulty with tandem welding is characterizing and monitoring the quality of the tandem weld. Analysis of tandem arc welding is complicated due to the use of multiple electrode wires for depositing metal simultaneously but at spatially separated positions. The electrode wires of the tandem electrodes may have different wire diameters. The wire feed speed of each electrode may be independently dynamically adjusted for each electrode to control the arc length or other welding characteristics. In some tandem arc welding applications, a combination of electrodes operating using d.c. current and a.c. current may be employed, for example to reduce interference between the electrodes. Still further, the voltage and/or current of each electrode may be independently controlled.
At a given location of the weld, each electrode in general contributes weld bead material at different times during the weld process. The metal deposition rate, heat input, and other welding parameters for that location depend upon the combined effect of the several electrodes of the tandem arrangement, but the contributions of the several electrodes are separated in time.
The present invention contemplates an improved apparatus and method that overcomes the above-mentioned limitations and others.
According to one aspect, a method is provided for monitoring a tandem welding process employing a plurality of tandem electrodes. A welding parameter is measured for each tandem electrode. The measured welding parameters are shifted to a reference. The measured and shifted welding parameters of the tandem electrodes are combined at the reference.
According to another aspect, a tandem welding system is disclosed. A plurality of spaced apart electrodes are arranged to travel at a common travel speed. The plurality of spaced apart electrodes cooperatively perform a weld. A data storage medium stores measured data for each electrode during the performing of the weld. A processor performs a process comprising: for each electrode, recalling measured data corresponding to the electrode passing a reference position; and combining the recalled measured data of the plurality of spaced apart electrodes to compute a weld parameter of the tandem welding system at the reference position.
According to yet another aspect, a tandem welding method is provided. A tandem welding process is performed using a plurality of electrodes arranged at fixed relative positions to one another and cooperatively forming a weld. A welding parameter of each of the plurality of electrodes is measured during the welding process. Welding parameter values for each electrode corresponding to the electrode welding at a selected position are determined. A tandem welding parameter of the tandem welding process is computed at the selected position based on the determined welding parameter values of the plurality of electrodes.
Numerous advantages and benefits of the present invention will become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art upon reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment.
The invention may take form in various components and arrangements of components, and in various process operations and arrangements of process operations. The drawings are only for the purpose of illustrating preferred embodiments and are not to be construed as limiting the invention.
With reference to
In the embodiment illustrated in
As illustrated in
Each electrode has a stick-out of length “A” (indicated in
Similarly, at the illustrated time, the electrode 16 is passing a location 34 of the weld joint 24. The electrodes 12, 14 have already passed the location 34 and deposited weld beads, which the electrode 16 adds to. The electrode 18 has not yet passed over the location 34. Because both electrodes 12, 14, 16 have deposited at the location 34, more weld material is disposed at the location 32 compared with the locations 30, 32. Finally, at the illustrated time, the electrode 18 is passing a location 36 of the weld joint 24. The electrodes 12, 14, 16 have already passed the location 36 and deposited weld material thereat, which the electrode 18 adds to. All four electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18 have deposited weld beads at the location 36 to form a composite weld bead at the location 36.
The illustrated tandem welding process 10 is an example process. In other embodiments, a tandem torch is used for tandem welding. The tandem torch includes a plurality of electrode wires, optionally with each having an independently controllable voltage, current, wire feed speed, and stickout. In the embodiment shown in
With reference to
A weld heat input for each electrode 12, 14, 16, 18 is defined by the product of the arc voltage and arc current divided by the travel speed in units of power per unit length of travel. For a.c. welding, the weld heat input is suitably computed using a product of rms current time rms voltage, optionally corrected for a power factor related to phase offset between the current and voltage. In the case of waveform controlled welding, the weld heat input is suitably computed using an integral of the current-voltage product as described in U.S. published application 2003-0071024 A1. It is to be appreciated, however, that the weld heat input may be estimated or approximated, for example by neglecting the power factor term in a.c. welding, or by multiplying rms current times rms voltage in the case of waveform controlled welding.
With reference to
With reference to
A data acquisition processor 70 receives measurement data from the parameter measurement devices 62, 64, 66, 68. The measured welding parameter data are optionally used by the processor 70 to generate one or more feedback signals 72 for controlling the welding process 10. For example, in a constant current welding process, the feedback signals 72 suitably include the measured arc currents of the electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18. The welding process 10 adjusts parameters such as the WFS or the arc voltage of each electrode to keep the feedback arc currents 72 substantially constant. In some embodiments, the WFS or arc voltage is similarly controlled for each electrode to control the arc length or other welding characteristics.
The measured welding parameter data are also stored in a data storage medium 74, which can be a substantially permanent, non-volatile memory such as a magnetic disk, or a transient, volatile memory such as random access memory (RAM), or some combination thereof. Optionally, the data acquisition processor 70 performs one or more computations or transformations of the measured data and stores the transformed measured welding parameter data.
In one embodiment, the parameter measurement devices 62, 64, 66, 68 output digital data measured at selected intervals (for example, one set of measurements every 100 milliseconds) and the stored data is digital data corresponding to discrete time values. In another embodiment, the parameter measurement devices 62, 64, 66, 68 perform analog measurements, and the data acquisition processor 70 includes analog-to-digital conversion circuitry that digitizes the measured data and stores digitized welding parameter measurements in the data storage medium 74.
The stored measured welding parameters can be accessed by a human user or operator via a user interface 80. The user interface includes on or more user inputs, such as an illustrated keyboard 82, a pointing device such as a mouse or trackball, or the like. The user interface also includes a display or monitor 84, which preferably has the capability of producing a graphical display, although a text-only display is also contemplated.
With reference to
The display or window of
With reference returning to
The combined tandem welding parameter may be of the same or different type from the welding parameter data for each of the four electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18. For example, the welding parameter data for each of the four electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18 may be weld current, and the combined tandem welding parameter may be total weld current computed by summing the weld currents of the four electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18. Alternatively, the welding parameter data for each of the four electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18 may be weld voltage and weld current, and the combined tandem welding parameter may be total weld heat input.
With continuing reference to
It is to be appreciated that the position x0 generally changes as a function of time due to travel of the ganged tandem electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18. For example, if the tandem welding process 10 initiates at a time t=0 with the lead electrode 12 at a position x=0, then the position x0 at a later time t is suitably obtained by multiplying the time t by the travel speed. In another embodiment, the position x0 is determined with reference to a travel position of the ganged plurality of electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18. This travel position can be monitored, for example, by sensors on the welding robot.
The position of the other electrodes, such as the position of the trailing electrode 18 designated as xl, at any given time t is given by xo+Δx where Δx is a signed separation or spacing between the lead electrode 12 (or other reference electrode or reference position) and the other electrode.
In one embodiment, the data acquisition processor 70 performs a measured data transformation that transforms the measured welding parameter data as a function of time for each electrode 12, 14, 16, 18 into measured welding parameter data as a function of position. Data for the lead electrode 12 are suitably transformed into a function of position according to xo=St where S is the travel speed and t is the data acquisition time for each measured welding parameter datum. Data for the electrode 18 are suitably transformed into a function of position using xl=xo+Δx. Data for the other electrodes 14, 16 are similarly transformed using appropriate spacings or separations of the electrodes 14, 16 from the lead electrode 12.
In another embodiment, the data acquisition processor 70 stores the measured welding data as a function of time, and the quality analysis processor 110 performs the conversion from time domain to position along the x-direction of travel using the above-discussed formulas.
Once data is converted to a function of position along the x-direction of travel, the tandem welding parameter is suitably computed by combining the welding parameter values of the plurality of electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18 at a given position. It will be appreciated that the combined data is temporally spaced apart in accordance with the described reference shifting.
In another embodiment, the data acquisition processor 70 stores the measured welding data as a function of time, and the quality analysis processor 110 computes the tandem welding parameter as a function of time as well. In this embodiment and designating the lead electrode 12 as the reference electrode, a datum value for lead electrode 12 acquired at a time to is combined with datum values for other electrodes acquired at times to+Δx/S, where Δx is a signed separation or spacing between the lead electrode 12 and the other electrode and S is the travel speed.
In one embodiment, the computed tandem welding parameters include deposition rate and weld heat input. The deposition rate for the tandem welding process 10 is suitably computed by adding together the deposition rates of the plurality of electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18 at a given position, for example at the lead electrode reference position xo. In order to compute the tandem welding deposition rate at xo, the computation is suitably delayed by a time corresponding to the spatial separation Δx between the lead electrode 12 and the last trailing electrode 18 divided by the travel speed, so that when the tandem welding deposition rate at xo is computed all four electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18 have performed deposition at the position xo. Alternatively, the tandem deposition rate can be calculated using the position xl of the trailing electrode 18 as the reference position, thus ensuring that all four electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18 have performed deposition at the reference position when the tandem welding parameter is computed.
Still further, while it is generally convenient to use the position of one of the plurality of electrodes as the reference, it is contemplated to have the reference arranged at some position other than the positions of the various electrodes. For example, a position lying midway between the electrodes 14, 16 can be selected as the reference. Such a reference has the advantage of corresponding to a midpoint of the tandem electrodes.
Similarly, the weld heat input for the tandem welding process 10 is suitably computed by adding together the weld heat inputs of the plurality of electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18 at the given position.
With reference to
In the example inputs shown in
The user inputs also include a set of wire diameter inputs 122 for the electrode wires of the electrodes. In the example inputs shown in
The user inputs further include a travel speed input 124 into which the user inputs the common travel speed of the ganged tandem electrodes 12, 14, 16, 18, and a metal density input 126 into which the user inputs the electrode wire density. Although a single metal density input 126 is provided in the display of
The set of wire diameter inputs 122, the metal density input 126, and the measured WFS for each electrode are used to compute the deposition rate for each wire according to:
where R is the deposition rate, i indexes the electrodes (i=1 . . . 4 for the tandem welding process 10), di is the wire diameter of ith electrode, ρmetal is the density of the electrode wire (for example, 490 lb/ft3 for steel), and (WFS)i is the wire feed speed of the ith electrode. The measured parameter (WFS)i for each electrode is suitably shifted to the reference time or position based on the travel speed and on the distance of the electrode from the lead electrode or other reference electrode, as described previously for computing tandem welding parameters.
The tandem welding heat input is suitably computed from the measured welding current and voltage parameters of the electrodes along with the travel speed as:
where H is the tandem welding heat input, i indexes the electrodes (i=1 . . . 4 for the tandem welding process 10), Vi and Ii are the measured voltage and current respectively, and S is the travel speed (60 inches/min in the example of
With continuing reference to
With continuing reference to
Moreover, an average heat input 160 is provided. The average heat input 160 is an average over the statistically analyzed range of the tandem heat input parameter computed, for example, using Equation (2).
With continuing reference to
In one embodiment, the set of statistical analysis values 140 shown in
To obtain a permanent record of the welding process 10, a “Save Report” button 188 is clicked by the user. This operation brings up a Windows save dialog or other suitable interfacing window through which the user identifies a logical file location and filename for saving the tandem welding parameters in a file. The stored data can include, for example, the measured welding parameters for each electrode 12, 14, 16, 18 as well as the tandem welding parameters computed therefrom, along with the values of user supplied inputs 120, 122, 124, 126. Although not shown in
The described analysis tools are examples only. Those skilled in the art can readily construct other tools. For example, a tandem welding input heat can be plotted in place of or in addition to the deposition rate graph 130. While tabs 132, 134 switch between the statistical and cursor values, it is contemplated to display both sets of parameters 140, 170 in a side-by-side, tiled, or other suitable display arrangement. Similarly, the graphs 90, 92, 94 of individual electrode measured parameters can be displayed side-by-side, tiled, or otherwise combined with the displays shown in
Still further, it is to be appreciated that the data storage medium 74 shown in
The described embodiments employ tandem electrodes arranged linearly along an x-direction of travel. However, the analysis method and apparatus can apply to other configurations of a plurality of electrode that cooperate to form a weld. For example, the described analysis methods and apparatus can be applied to a parallel electrodes configuration in which a plurality of electrodes are arranged to simultaneously dispose weld beads at the same x-position along the x-direction of travel. This arrangement is accommodated by setting the “Distance from Lead” inputs 120 (shown in
The invention has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments. Obviously, modifications and alterations will occur to others upon reading and understanding the preceding detailed description. It is intended that the invention be construed as including all such modifications and alterations insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3150624 | Brems | Sep 1964 | A |
4806735 | Ditschun et al. | Feb 1989 | A |
5140140 | Pollack | Aug 1992 | A |
5214265 | Pollack | May 1993 | A |
5278390 | Blankenship | Jan 1994 | A |
6111216 | Stava | Aug 2000 | A |
6207929 | Stava | Mar 2001 | B1 |
6291798 | Stava | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6472634 | Houston | Oct 2002 | B1 |
20030071024 | Hsu | Apr 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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61-017364 | Jan 1986 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050133488 A1 | Jun 2005 | US |