Horizontal Position In Welding ~repack~ Info
“Flat, of course,” Marco said, pointing to the top of the pipe. “The bracket goes here.”
Lou knelt beside him. “You fought gravity. In flat position, gravity helps you. In horizontal position, gravity pulls the puddle down . You need to aim your rod slightly upward and pause on the top edge to let the metal freeze before it sags. Also, run a stringer bead—don’t weave wide.” horizontal position in welding
Marco shrugged. He’d done flat welds before. He struck an arc. “Flat, of course,” Marco said, pointing to the
The lesson Marco never forgot: Welding on top of a horizontal pipe is horizontal position welding (per AWS: 2F for fillet, 2G for groove)—and it requires deliberate technique to manage gravity’s sideways pull. Ignore that, and your weld will sag, undercut, or fail when it matters most. Takeaway for your own work: When you see a horizontal joint (the weld’s length runs left-to-right), always remember—gravity is not your friend. Aim slightly upward, keep a tight arc, and watch the puddle’s lower edge like a hawk. That small adjustment separates a pretty weld from a safe weld. In flat position, gravity helps you
“Yeah.”
Marco was a second-year welding apprentice working on a water treatment plant upgrade. His task: weld a support bracket onto a 12-inch horizontal steel pipe that carried non-potable water. The pipe was stationary, about chest-high, and the weld was a simple fillet—a perfect opportunity to practice.
His journeyman, Lou, was a quiet veteran with 30 years of experience. Lou looked at Marco’s setup and asked, “What position are you using?”