Contour & Finishing Symbols
Contour symbols specify the required Schweiß surface shape: Flach, Konvex, or Konkav. Seven finishing designator letters (G/M/C/H/P/R/U) indicate the mechanical method when required. Per A2.4 Abschnitt 6.13, designators specify method only. D1.1 Tabelle 8.1 governs Nahtprofil Zulässigkeitskriterien for Baustahl.
7 Finishing Designator Letters
When a specific mechanical finishing method is required after Schweißen, the designator letter is placed next to the Oberflächensymbol. Per §6.13.2, these designators specify the method only — not the quality or surface roughness of the finish.
| Letter | Finishing Method | Common Use |
|---|---|---|
| G | Grinding | Most common — CJP groove welds at moment connections, fatigue-critical joints |
| M | Machining | Precision surfaces — bearing seats, rotating equipment |
| C | Chipping | Removing slag or excess Schweißgut with pneumatic chisel |
| H | Hammering | Peening operations — Spannungsarmglühen in specific applications |
| P | Planishing | Smoothing with a flat-faced tool — sheet metal applications |
| R | Rolling | Rolling to smooth or cold-work the surface |
| U | Unspecified | Mechanical finishing required, method at Hersteller’s discretion (§6.13.3) |
Groove Weld Contour Applications
A2.4 Figure 7.15 shows three practical applications of contour and finishing symbols on groove welds:
CWI Exam Tip: The contour symbol is placed on top of the Schweißsymbol, not beside it. When no finishing letter is shown, the contour may be achieved by Schweißtechnik alone. The letter G (grinding) is the most commonly tested finishing designator on the CWI exam.