Electrode Types and Metallurgy
E6010 cellulose electrodes, E7018 low-hydrogen properties, hydrogen cracking, and preheat requirements.
- Compare cellulose (E6010) and low-hydrogen (E7018) electrode properties
- Explain hydrogen cracking causes and prevention methods
- Determine preheat requirements based on material thickness and composition
- Describe rod oven management and maximum exposure times
Leçon 1
Cellulose vs Low-Hydrogen Electrodes
E6010 - Cellulose Electrode
E6010 has a cellulose-based flux coating that produces a violent, deeply penetrating arc. It is the electrode of choice for root passes in pipe welding and open-root joints.
E6010 (Cellulose)
Deep penetration - aggressive arc
DCEP only
Fast-freeze slag - good for vertical/overhead
Root passes and pipe welding
Rough bead appearance
Higher hydrogen content
E7018 (Low-Hydrogen)
Medium penetration - smooth arc
AC or DCEP
Heavy slag - self-peeling
Fill, cap, and structural passes
Smooth bead appearance
Very low hydrogen content
Why E7018 Dominates Structural Work
E7018 is the standard electrode for all CWB-certified structural steel welding because:
- Low hydrogen content prevents hydrogen cracking
- Higher tensile strength (70,000 psi vs 60,000 psi for E6010)
- Better mechanical properties
- Smoother, more consistent bead appearance
- Iron powder in coating increases deposition rate
When to Use Each
E6010 for root passes where deep penetration is needed. E7018 for everything else - hot pass, fill, cap, and all structural work where low hydrogen is critical.
E6010 (cellulose) provides deep penetration for root passes but has higher hydrogen content. E7018 (low-hydrogen) is the standard for structural welding, providing low hydrogen, higher strength, and better mechanical properties. Both are essential in CWB-certified work.