To reduce the number of welding and brazing procedure
qualifications required base metals have been assigned P-Numbers by the ASME
BPVC. Ferrous metals which have
specified impact test requirements have been assigned Group Numbers within
P-Numbers.
These assignments have been based on comparable base metal
characteristics, such as:
-
Composition
-
Weldability
-
Brazeability
-
Mechanical Properties
Indiscriminant substitution of materials in a set of
P-Numbers or Group Numbers may lead to problems or potentially failures. Engineering assessment is necessary prior to
a change in materials.
When a base metal with a UNS number Designation is assigned a
P-Number, then a base metal listed in a different ASME material specification
with the same UNS number shall be considered that P-Number.
The table below is a guide and is for instructive purposes
only. Anyone specifying materials or requirements should refer directly to the
ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code to specify materials, P-Numbers,
procedures, or other requirements and not rely on the table below. The table
below is only a rather INCOMPLETE and APPROXIMATE summary of ASME data for
INSTRUCTIONAL USE ONLY. See ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code for materials
specifications and P-Numbers.
P-Numbers
|
Base Metal (Typical or Example)
|
1
|
Carbon Manganese Steels (four Group Numbers)
|
2
|
Not Used
|
3
|
Half Molybdenum or half Chromium, half Molybdenum (three
Group Numbers)
|
4
|
One and a quarter Chromium, half Molybdenum (two Group
Numbers)
|
5A
|
Two and a quarter Chromium, one Molybdenum
|
5B
|
Five Chromium, half Molybdenum or nine Chromium, one
Molybdenum (two Group Numbers)
|
5C
|
Chromium, Molybdenum, Vanadium (five Group
Numbers)
|
6
|
Martensitic Stainless Steels (Grade 410, 415, 429) (six Group
Numbers)
|
7
|
Ferritic Stainless Steels (Grade 409, 430)
|
8
|
Austenitic Stainless Steels
|
9A, B, C
|
Two to four Nickel Steels
|
10A, B, C, F
|
Various low alloy steels
|
10H
|
Duplex and Super Duplex Stainless Steel (Grades 31803,
32750)
|
10I
|
High Chromium Stainless Steel
|
10J
|
High Chromium, Molybdenum Stainless Steel
|
10K
|
High Chromium, Molybdenum, Nickel Stainless
Steel
|
11A
|
Various high strength low alloy steels (six Group
Numbers)
|
11B
|
Various high strength low alloy steels (ten Group
Numbers)
|
12 to 20
|
Not Used
|
21
|
High Aluminum content (1000 and 3000 series)
|
22
|
Aluminum (5000 series - 5052, 5454)
|
23
|
Aluminum (6000 series – 6061, 6063)
|
24
|
Not Used
|
25
|
Aluminum (5000 series - 5083, 5086, 5456)
|
26 to 30
|
Not used
|
31
|
High Copper content
|
32
|
Brass
|
33
|
Copper Silicone
|
34
|
Copper Nickel
|
35
|
Copper Aluminum
|
36 to 40
|
Not Used
|
41
|
High Nickel content
|
42
|
Nickel, Copper - (Monel 500)
|
43
|
Nickel, Chromium, Iron - (Inconel)
|
44
|
Nickel, Molybdenum – (Hastelloy B2, C22, C276,
X)
|
45
|
Nickel, Chromium
|
46
|
Nickel, Chromium, Silicone
|
47
|
Nickel, Chromium, Tungsten
|
47 to 50
|
Not Used
|
51, 52, 53
|
Titanium Alloys
|
61, 62
|
Zirconium Alloys
|
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