About Combined Welds
A combined weld associates one or more welds to be performed in the same welding operation sequence.
For combined welds, you can select the following options alternatively or in combination:
• reinforced—Combines two welds, one fillet weld plus one groove or butt weld, to create a reinforced weld.
• both sides—Combines two to four welds on both sides of a joint into one weld.
• similar—Combines welds with the same weld definition.
| All reinforced welds can also be both-sided, but not all both-sides welds are reinforced. |
Type of Combined Weld | Example | Description |
Reinforced | 1. Fillet 2. Groove | A V groove and fillet weld are combined in a single welding sequence. |
Both sides | 1. Both sides fillet | Two fillet welds are combined in a single welding sequence. |
Similar | 1. Fillet | Six similar fillet welds are combined in a single welding sequence. |
The following figure shows possible combinations of combined welds.
1. Reinforced
2. Both sides
3. Reinforced and both sides
You can automatically show welding symbols for certain types of combined welds. Supported symbols for Reinforced and Both Sides welds are listed below:
• reinforced—Square groove or square butt, bevel groove or bevel butt, J groove or J butt, and flare bevel groove. A fillet weld is always a reinforcing weld.
• both sides—Fillet, square groove or square butt, bevel groove or bevel butt, V groove or V butt, J groove or J butt, U groove or U butt, flare V groove, and flare bevel groove.
• similar—Welds that have exactly the same weld definition and that differ only by references used to define location.