Every Weld Tells a Story — and Sometimes It Whispers Before It Breaks

A silent threat in a pressurized recirculation line.
Inspection is not a snapshot.
Sometimes, you read the life story of a weld… and uncover a ticking time bomb.

This case involves a WB36 pipe (⌀ 298.6 × 23 mm), operating at 375 °C and 346 kgf/cm².

During a routine inspection, I detected a subtle MT indication in one of the welds.

Further investigation revealed:
A transgranular crack propagating from the inside, initiated at a notch in the root pass.


Causes & Findings

  • Crack initiated at a sharp angle caused by excessive root penetration
  • Partially filled with oxides, likely formed during or shortly after welding
  • No anomalies in hardness or microstructure (200 HV10, compliant with WB36)
  • Mechanism: Thermal stress, not pressure-induced

Lesson:

Even with properly stress-relieved weld metal, geometric stress concentrations combined with thermal cycling can initiate critical cracking.

Inspection means understanding.
It’s not just about what you see — but what it’s becoming.


🔎 Your Turn

In your experience, which geometries deserve special attention in weld design or inspection?

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