AWS D1.1:2025 · Table 5.11 · Category B

A106 Gr.B Preheat for FCAW — 1-1/2" to 2-1/2"

Minimum preheat and interpass temperature for A106 Gr.B welded with FCAW at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2" thickness, per AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11.

Built on AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11 — every value traced to the clause.

Minimum Preheat & Interpass Temperature
150°F / 65°C
Category B Low-hydrogen SMAW, SAW, GMAW, or FCAW process
AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11, §5.7
Reference tool. Verify against project-applicable edition and Engineer-approved WPS.

Have a preheat question? Ask Flux

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.

FCAW on pipe butt joints uses gas-shielded wire for root passes with backing rings or ceramic backup. Self-shielded FCAW excels on pipeline tie-in welds in windy field conditions where gas cups cannot maintain a stable envelope. Typical wire diameter for pipe work is 0.045" for root and 0.052" for fill passes.

Why FCAW for A106 Gr.B at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2"

Why FCAW for A106 Gr.B at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2"? FCAW delivers 8-12 lb/hr deposition — compared to SAW at 15-40 lb/hr. Position capability: all positions. Suitability: field and shop.

Filler Metal for FCAW

Gas-shielded: E71T-1C (AWS A5.20, requires 100% CO2) or E71T-1M (requires 75/25 Ar/CO2 mixed gas) — the C/M suffix designates the required shielding gas. Self-shielded: E71T-8 (no external gas, field-ready). Diameter: 0.045" standard, 1/16" for high-deposition. Stick-out: 3/4" to 1-1/4" (longer than GMAW due to resistive heating of flux core).

Typical values for reference — always verify against your approved WPS and electrode manufacturer data.

A106 Gr.B

ASTM A106 Grade B covers seamless carbon steel pipe for high-temperature service up to about 750°F, with 35 ksi minimum yield and 60 ksi minimum tensile strength. Produced in sizes from 1/4" through 30" NPS, it is the standard pipe material for power plants, refineries, and process piping where elevated temperature and pressure coexist. Chemistry limits (0.30% max carbon, 0.29-1.06% manganese) give it a weldability profile that matches common structural grades with Category A and B preheat requirements. A106 is exclusively seamless, which eliminates the ERW seam concern present in A53. Grade C (40 ksi yield) exists but Grade B handles the vast majority of process piping service.

Why This Preheat for A106 Gr.B with FCAW

Seamless pipe rated for high-temperature service up to 750°F. With low-hydrogen FCAW, this combination falls under Category B rather than Category A — flux-cored wire in FCAW provides a combination of deoxidizers and low-moisture flux formulations that control hydrogen. The 150°F minimum preheat is lower than what non-low-hydrogen SMAW would require at the same thickness because FCAW significantly reduces the driving force for hydrogen-induced cracking in the heat-affected zone.

Typical Applications for A106 Gr.B

Used in boiler steam headers, refinery piping racks, process plant branch connections, heat exchanger nozzle welds, power plant main steam lines, petrochemical reactor feed piping, and high-temperature manifolds. A106 Gr.B butt welds in process piping require joint preparation to B31.1 (power piping) or B31.3 (process piping) depending on service classification. Socket welds on small-bore A106 drain lines and instrument take-offs are common in utility stations, typically 1/2" to 2" NPS. Typical wall thicknesses range from Schedule 40 (0.237" wall on 2" NPS) to Schedule 160 (0.500" wall on 4" NPS) in critical high-energy service. Weld procedure qualification often includes side bend tests and tensile tests specific to the pipe diameter and wall thickness being joined. Field welds at pipe-to-flange connections and valve set-on joints require portable preheating equipment when wall thickness exceeds 1/2".

Why Preheat Matters at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2"

Heavy plate with significant restraint and thermal mass — preheat is critical to maintain slow cooling for hydrogen escape.

Other Steels with FCAW at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2"

SteelCategoryPreheat
A36B150°F (65°C)
A633 Gr.EC225°F (110°C)
A709 HPS70WC225°F (110°C)
A710 Gr.AC225°F (110°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 A106 Gr.B with FCAW at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2"?
When welding A106 Gr.B at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2" using FCAW, the minimum preheat temperature is 150°F (65°C) per AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11, Category B. FCAW places this combination in Category B. This is also the minimum interpass temperature — the joint must not cool below 150°F between passes.
What Table 5.11 category applies to A106 Gr.B with FCAW?
When using FCAW on A106 Gr.B, the combination falls under Category B in AWS D1.1:2025 Table 5.11. Low-hydrogen SMAW, SAW, GMAW, or FCAW process. At 1-1/2" to 2-1/2" thickness, Category B with FCAW requires a minimum preheat of 150°F (65°C).
Why is preheat 150°F for A106 Gr.B at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2"?
The 150°F preheat for A106 Gr.B at 1-1/2" to 2-1/2" when using FCAW reflects the combination of the steel's hardenability and the increased restraint at this thickness. FCAW delivers controlled hydrogen levels, but at this thickness the preheat must slow the cooling rate in the heat-affected zone, giving diffusible hydrogen more time to escape before the steel transforms to a crack-susceptible microstructure.
What happens if I skip preheat on thick plate?
Without adequate preheat on material in the 1-1/2” to 2-1/2” range, the weld HAZ cools rapidly, trapping diffusible hydrogen in a hardened microstructure. This creates conditions for hydrogen-induced cracking (also called cold cracking or delayed cracking), which may not appear until hours or days after welding. Table 5.11 preheat minimums are set to prevent this failure mode.

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