Welded Pipe (ERW/LSAW)

Description

Welded pipes are generally more cost-effective and available in larger diameters than seamless pipes.

  • ERW (Electric Resistance Welding): Created from a coil of steel. The edges are heated by an electric current and pressed together to form a bond without any filler metal.

  • LSAW (Longitudinal Submerged Arc Welding): Created from a heavy steel plate. The edges are joined using an arc welding process that uses a filler wire and a layer of flux to protect the weld.

  • SSAW (Spiral Submerged Arc Welding): The steel strip is wrapped like a ribbon (spirally), allowing for massive diameters (up to 100 inches) from narrower strips of steel.

Category:

1. Working Principle (Manufacturing)

The process varies depending on the welding technology:

  • ERW Process: A cold-rolled strip is passed through a series of rollers to form a tube. High-frequency electrical current is applied to the edges. The heat generated by the material’s electrical resistance melts the edges, which are then squeezed together by “pressure rolls” to create a forged weld.7

     

  • LSAW Process: A heavy plate is bent into a “U” shape, then an “O” shape (the UOE process).8 A welding machine then performs an arc weld on both the inside and outside of the seam using a consumable wire.

     

  • Finishing: The “weld bead” (the raised portion of the weld) is often trimmed or “scarfed” to make the pipe smooth.9

     


2. Primary Use

The primary use of welded pipe is for Low to Medium Pressure Fluid Transport and Structural Applications.

It is preferred over seamless pipe when:

  • Cost is a factor: Welded pipe is significantly cheaper to produce.10

     

  • Large Diameters are needed: It is much easier to roll a large plate into a 48-inch pipe than it is to pierce a solid 48-inch billet.

  • Wall Thickness Uniformity: Because it starts as a flat, precisely rolled plate, the wall thickness is often more consistent than seamless pipe.


3. Common Applications

Welded pipes are the “veins” of modern infrastructure:

Type Common Application
ERW Pipe Water mains, fencing, scaffolding, and low-pressure gas lines in housing.
LSAW Pipe High-pressure oil and gas transmission pipelines over long distances.
SSAW (Spiral) Large-diameter water transport and piling for bridges and building foundations.
Automotive Exhaust pipes, chassis components, and seat frames.
HVAC Ductwork and cooling water circulation in large buildings.