If you care about productivity (and arc stability that doesn’t throw surprises), you’ve probably already looked at tubular welding wire. I’ve spent enough late nights in fab shops to say: when set up right, it simply eats steel. Actually, that’s why shipyards and wind tower welders keep it close.
From the factory in NO.368 YOUYI NORTH STREET, XINHUA DISTRICT, SHIJIAZHUANG CITY, CHINA, this product comes in both gas-shielded and self-shielded variants (many customers still call them gas-entrained and non-gas-protected). In fact, there’s a lively trend right now toward low-hydrogen rutile and metal-cored types for better impact toughness at sub-zero temps. To be honest, the days of “one wire fits all” are over—custom flux recipes are winning bids.
| AWS/ASME Class (example) | E71T-1C/M, E71T-1M H4; self-shielded options available |
| EN ISO | ISO 17632-A T 42 2 C1/M 1 H10 |
| Diameters | 0.8 / 1.0 / 1.2 / 1.6 mm (others by request) |
| Gas & Polarity | CO2 or Ar/CO2 mix; DCEP (self-shielded varies) |
| Tensile Strength | ≈ 500–560 MPa (typical), yield ≈ 420–480 MPa |
| Impact Toughness | ≥ 27–47 J @ -20°C (real-world use may vary) |
| Diffusible Hydrogen | H4–H10 ml/100g (depending on grade and storage) |
| Deposition Rate | Up to ≈ 6–10 kg/h with 1.2–1.6 mm on high current |
Materials: low-carbon steel strip, alloy powders, deoxidizers, rutile or basic fluxes, sometimes metal-cored blends for higher deposition.
Process flow: strip forming → flux filling → seam closure → drawing to size → copper-coating (if specified) → spooling → vacuum/foil packaging with desiccant. Testing includes wire ovality, feedability, chemistry, weld metal mechanicals, diffusible hydrogen (AWS A4.3), radiography/visual for test welds, and impact tests per AWS A5.20/ISO 17632. Shelf life is typically around 24 months if sealed; opened spools should be kept below 60% RH—many shops rebag overnight. Service life of the weld itself? That’s on design and procedure (AWS D1.1), but low hydrogen helps a lot with cracking.
Advantages: higher deposition vs solid wire, slag supports the puddle on verticals, reduced sensitivity to mill scale. Drawbacks? Slag removal (though it peels nicely on good settings), and yes—parameter windows aren’t infinite.
| Vendor | Grades | Hydrogen | Lead Time | Certs | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SteelToolsChina (tubular welding wire) | E71T-1C/M, self-shielded options | H4–H10 | ≈ 2–4 weeks | ISO 9001, EN 13479 | Custom flux design, competitive MOQ |
| Lincoln Electric | UltraCore/Outershield | H4/H8 | Stock-dependent | Global approvals | Strong tech docs, price premium |
| Kobelco | DW-series | H4/H8 | Regional | DNV, ABS options | Great vertical-up behavior |
| Böhler | Seamless flux/metal-cored | H4/H5 | Planned | CE, ISO, marine | Low moisture pickup, premium |
Customization: spools/drums, tailored slag systems (rutile vs basic), alloy tweaks (Ni for -40°C impact), and wire cast/helix tuning for automated lines. Many shops report smoother feeding on 1.2 mm tubular welding wire after specifying tighter helix tolerance.
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