RFQ Today
Certifications: EN 10204 3.1 / 3.2 MTRs, NACE MR0175 compliance, PWHT records, RT/UT weld inspection procedures, Third-Party Inspection (SGS / BV / DNV / Lloyds), and complete EPC export documentation packages.
Weldolets
A world-class technical reference for EPC piping engineers, stress analysts, procurement heads, TPI inspection agencies, and global project buyers specifying weldolets — integrally reinforced butt-weld branch connection fittings that provide a full-penetration butt-weld outlet on a run pipe for medium and large-bore branch connections in high-pressure, high-temperature, fatigue-critical, corrosive, and safety-critical process piping across Oil & Gas, Power Generation, Petrochemical, Offshore, Nuclear, and all ASME B31.3 / B31.1 / B31.8 coded piping systems.
SIF Advantage
& Weldolet vs Alternatives
Weldolets are the highest-integrity branch connection fitting in the olet family — the butt-weld outlet provides a full-penetration weld joint between the weldolet and the branch pipe, equivalent in quality and NDE accessibility to any butt-weld joint in the piping system, and with the lowest stress intensification factor (SIF) of any branch connection method for the same branch/run diameter ratio.
1.1 — Technical Definition and Scope
A weldolet is an integrally reinforced branch connection fitting with a butt-weld (BW) outlet — the outlet face is machined with a standard ASME B16.25 bevel for butt welding to the branch pipe end. The weldolet base is saddle-contoured to match the run pipe OD, and is attached to the run pipe by a single fillet (or groove) weld at the saddle perimeter — the same base weld as for threadolets and sockolets. The distinction is at the outlet: the butt-weld outlet of the weldolet accepts the branch pipe with a full-penetration groove weld per ASME B16.25 bevel geometry, providing a weld quality and NDE accessibility equivalent to any other butt-weld joint in the piping system.
Weldolets are specified over sockolets and threadolets in several conditions: (1) Branch bore NPS 2″ and above — socket-weld connections are not manufactured or practical above NPS 2″; threaded connections above NPS 2″ are restricted in most EPC piping classes; (2) High-pressure / high-temperature piping above ASME Class 600# — where BW connections are mandatory by the piping class; (3) Full-penetration weld NDE requirement — where 100% radiographic or ultrasonic examination (RT/UT) is required, the weldolet butt-weld outlet can be radiographed; the fillet weld outlet of a sockolet cannot be radiographed (RT/UT is inaccessible to the socket geometry); (4) Corrosive service with crevice corrosion concern — the weldolet eliminates the socket bottom crevice inherent to the sockolet, providing a flush, crevice-free internal weld joint surface; and (5) High-cycle fatigue piping — the weldolet full-penetration outlet weld has significantly lower SIF than both threadolet and sockolet outlets.
1.2 — Stress Intensification Factor (SIF) and Fatigue Significance
T_e = Effective wall thickness at the branch connection (mm) — depends on fitting geometry
r_b = Branch mean radius (mm) = (d_b − t_b) / 2
SIF comparison for a 2″ branch on 6″ run pipe (typical values per B31.3 Appendix D):
Stub-in welded branch (no reinforcement): i ≈ 3.5–4.5 — highest SIF, worst fatigue life
Threadolet (MSS SP-97, fillet weld base + threaded outlet): i ≈ 2.5–3.5
Sockolet (MSS SP-97, fillet weld base + SW outlet): i ≈ 2.0–3.0
Weldolet (MSS SP-97, fillet weld base + BW outlet): i ≈ 1.5–2.5 — lowest SIF of olet family
Reducing tee ASME B16.9 (standard): i ≈ 1.5–2.0 — comparable to weldolet
Fatigue life implication: Fatigue life ∝ (1/i)^m where m ≈ 3–5 for steel piping. Reducing the SIF from 3.5 (stub-in) to 2.0 (weldolet) increases fatigue life by a factor of (3.5/2.0)^3 = 5.4× — a weldolet provides over 5× longer fatigue life than an unreinforced stub-in for the same cyclic stress amplitude.
A 4″ branch on a 10″ compressor discharge header experiences ±20 MPa cyclic bending stress from compressor-induced vibration.
Stub-in branch: SIF ≈ 4.0 → equivalent stress = 4.0 × 20 = 80 MPa cyclic → fatigue failure in 50,000 cycles
Weldolet: SIF ≈ 2.0 → equivalent stress = 2.0 × 20 = 40 MPa cyclic → fatigue failure in 400,000 cycles (8× longer life)
Engineering decision: specify weldolet on all compressor discharge header branch connections — extends piping system fatigue life to design life with no weight or space penalty.
1.3 — Weldolet vs Alternative Branch Connection Methods
| Method | Reinforcement | Outlet Weld Type | NDE Accessibility | SIF (Typical) | Max Branch/Run | Preferred Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weldolet (MSS SP-97) | Integral (self-reinforcing) | Full-penetration BW | RT/UT accessible | 1.5–2.5 | ~75% of run bore | All high-pressure BW piping; fatigue-critical |
| Reducing Tee (ASME B16.9) | Full tee forging | 2× BW to run pipe | RT/UT accessible | 1.5–2.0 | Equal bore | Equal or near-equal bore branches; main line |
| Stub-in (no reinforcement) | None (relies on excess wall) | Groove weld to run pipe | RT/UT accessible | 3.5–4.5 | Per calculation | Low-pressure; low-cycle where calc’d adequate |
| Stub-in + reinforcement pad | Pad plate | Groove weld + pad fillet | Limited (pad covers weld) | 2.5–3.5 | Per calculation | Where tee and weldolet not available; mid-bore |
| Sockolet (MSS SP-97) | Integral (self-reinforcing) | SW fillet weld | RT/UT NOT accessible | 2.0–3.0 | NPS 2″ max | SW piping class; NPS ≤ 2″; no crevice risk |
| Threadolet (MSS SP-97) | Integral (self-reinforcing) | Threaded (removable) | N/A (threaded) | 2.5–3.5 | NPS 2″ max | Instrument taps; drain/vent; removable |
1.4 — Branch/Run Diameter Ratio Limits
1.5 — Full Olet Family Context
Weldolet — Butt-Weld Outlet (This Page)
Full-penetration butt-weld outlet; full NDE accessibility (RT/UT of the outlet weld); lowest SIF of olet family; no internal crevice; used for NPS 1″ branch and above, and all piping classes requiring BW connections (typically ASME 600# and above). The engineering standard for all medium and large-bore branch connections in high-integrity process piping. Available in all materials and schedules matching the branch pipe specification. Per MSS SP-97 and ASME B16.9 (the outlet face bevel per ASME B16.25).
Sockolet — Socket-Weld Outlet
Socket-weld outlet; limited to NPS ½”–2″ SW branch; fillet weld outlet (not full-penetration); RT/UT inaccessible; internal socket crevice; used where threaded connections are restricted but SW is permitted (ASME B31.1 steam piping below BW-only threshold; cryogenic piping; Category M piping). Superior to threadolet for fatigue resistance but inferior to weldolet. Selected when piping class specifies SW connections in the NPS ½”–2″ range.
Threadolet — Threaded Outlet
NPT/BSPT threaded outlet; limited to NPS ½”–2″ threaded branch; highest SIF of olet family; removable connection for instrument maintenance; no full-penetration weld at outlet; used for instrument taps, drain/vent connections, and all small-bore branches where the piping class permits threaded connections (typically ≤ ASME Class 300# for most EPC piping classes). Dominant for instrument branch connections because of the removable threaded outlet that allows instrument removal without hot work.
Elbolet — Elbow-Mounted Outlet
A branch fitting mounted on an elbow rather than straight run pipe — available with BW, SW, or threaded outlet depending on the elbow-mounted service requirement. Provides a thermowell, drain, or instrument tap at the elbow tangent point where a standard olet cannot be mounted on the straight pipe geometry. Used at pipe elbow locations where the process designer requires a temperature measurement or drain point at the flow direction change — the elbow location provides better mixing representation for temperature measurement and better drain access at the pipe low point in a bent pipe run.
Sweepolet — Long-Radius BW Outlet
A weldolet variant with a long-radius (swept) body contour between the run pipe saddle and the branch BW outlet — the gradual transition reduces the SIF below the standard weldolet value, approaching the SIF of a full-bore reducing tee. The sweepolet provides the lowest possible SIF of any branch connection fitting for high-cycle applications. Specified for: reciprocating compressor manifold branches; pump suction headers with high-cycle pressure pulsation; steam hammer-susceptible branch points; and any branch where the standard weldolet SIF is still too high for the calculated fatigue life. Custom-profiled sweepolets are manufactured to project drawings.
Weldolet vs Reducing Tee — Decision Guide
Reducing tee (ASME B16.9 BW fitting): specified when the branch is equal to or close to the run pipe bore (d/D > 0.75); when two butt welds to the run pipe are acceptable in the piping layout; and when the forged tee geometry provides a more efficient flow path (lower pressure drop) than the weldolet/branch pipe connection. Weldolet: specified when the branch is significantly smaller than the run pipe (d/D < 0.75); when only one weld to the run pipe is feasible (limited run pipe access); when the piping layout cannot accommodate the full-length tee fitting; and when the branch connection must be located at a specific point on an existing run pipe (retrofit — cutting in a tee requires removing and replacing a pipe spool; cutting in a weldolet does not).
Submit your run pipe NPS/schedule, branch NPS/schedule, material, and quantity for a documented RFQ within 24 hours.
Reference, Bevel Design
& Standards Compliance
Weldolet outlet bevel dimensions follow ASME B16.25 butt-weld end preparation; the fitting body dimensions are governed by MSS SP-97. Branch size NPS 1″–20″ on run pipe NPS 2″–36″. All applicable standards are supported at RR Hydraulic with full certification.
Submit run pipe NPS and schedule, branch NPS and schedule, material, and quantity to sales@rrhydraulics.com for a certified offer.
2.1 — Weldolet Size and Wall Class Reference
| Weldolet Wall Class | Compatible Branch Pipe Schedules | Outlet Wall Thickness | Service / Pressure Class | NPS Branch Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard (STD) | Sch 40 / STD | Matches branch Sch 40 | ASME Class 150#–300# | ½”–20″ |
| Extra Heavy (XH / XS) | Sch 80 / XH | Matches branch Sch 80 | ASME Class 300#–600# | ½”–20″ |
| Extra Extra Heavy (XXH / XXS) | Sch 160 / XXH / Sch 160 | Matches branch Sch 160/XXH | ASME Class 600#–1500# | ½”–12″ |
| Schedule-Specific (Custom) | Sch 10S, 20S, 40S, 80S (SS) | Matches specified schedule | Per pressure calculation | ½”–24″ |
2.2 — ASME B16.25 Butt-Weld Bevel Reference for Weldolet Outlets
| Wall Thickness (t) | Bevel Type | Bevel Angle | Root Face | Bore Mismatch Tolerance | Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| t ≤ 22 mm (⅞”) | Standard 37.5° bevel | 37.5° ± 2.5° | 1.6 mm ± 0.8 mm | ± 1.6 mm | Standard BW for most process piping |
| t > 22 mm | Compound bevel (J-bevel or special) | Per B16.25 Fig.3 | 3.2 mm ± 1.6 mm | ± 1.6 mm | Heavy-wall high-pressure piping |
| Any t — bore mismatch | Transition taper (1:4) | N/A | Per bore OD | +1.6 mm bore step | Where weldolet bore ≠ branch bore |
2.3 — Applicable Standards and Compliance Framework
MSS SP-97
Integrally Reinforced Socket Weld, Threaded, and Buttwelding Branch Outlet Fittings — the primary standard governing weldolets alongside sockolets and threadolets. MSS SP-97 for weldolets specifies: minimum body wall thickness at each size and wall class (STD/XH/XXH); the saddle bore contour requirement (±0.5 mm from run pipe OD/2); the outlet face bevel per ASME B16.25; the run pipe and branch size combinations covered as “listed” fittings; and marking requirements. Weldolets per MSS SP-97 are listed fittings under ASME B31.3 and B31.1 — accepted on code piping without individual engineering qualification for tabulated size combinations and wall classes.
ASME B16.25
Buttwelding Ends — the standard defining the bevel geometry for butt-weld end preparation on all piping components including weldolet outlets. B16.25 specifies: the standard 37.5° bevel angle (for wall thickness ≤ 22 mm); the root face dimension (1.6 mm ± 0.8 mm); compound bevel profiles for heavy-wall fittings; and the bore alignment tolerance for mismatched bores between weldolet and branch pipe. The weldolet outlet bevel must match the branch pipe end bevel — the welder cannot achieve a sound full-penetration root pass if the bevel angles are mismatched. Bevel angle verification on the weldolet outlet is a mandatory QC item before dispatch.
ASME B31.3
Process Piping — the governing code for EPC process piping. B31.3 Paragraph 304.3.3 covers branch connection area replacement; weldolets per MSS SP-97 are pre-qualified for all listed combinations. B31.3 NDE requirements for butt welds (the weldolet-to-branch pipe butt weld) per Table 341.3.2: Normal fluid service — spot (5%) RT or UT; Category D — visual only; severe cyclic / Category M — 100% RT or UT. The weldolet-to-branch pipe BW is accessible to RT and UT — a critical engineering advantage over sockolet SW outlets that cannot be fully RT/UT examined. For high-pressure and fatigue-critical B31.3 piping: 100% RT/UT of all weldolet outlet butt welds is typically specified in the project inspection and test plan (ITP).
ASME B31.1
Power Piping — the governing code for high-pressure steam and boiler plant piping. ASME B31.1 specifies weldolets as the standard branch connection fitting for all steam piping above the pressure-temperature threshold where threaded and socket-weld connections are restricted. For main steam and hot reheat piping in power plants (typically 160–300 bar, 540–620°C): weldolets in the appropriate alloy steel grade (F11, F22, F91) are specified for drain, vent, and instrument branch connections. B31.1 radiographic examination requirements for BW joints in power piping are typically more stringent than B31.3 — 100% RT of all weld joints in main steam piping is standard EPC practice for power plant piping regardless of the B31.1 minimum NDE code requirements.
ASME VIII Div.1 (Pressure Vessels)
ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code Section VIII Division 1 — governs weldolets used in pressure vessel shell and head nozzle branch connections where the vessel is designed as an ASME VIII Div.1 pressure vessel rather than ASME B31 piping. The area replacement rules of ASME VIII Div.1 Paragraph UG-37 are the basis for the integral reinforcement design of weldolets. Weldolets installed on pressure vessel shells must comply with UG-36 (nozzle reinforcement) and UW-16 (attachment welds for nozzles) as well as MSS SP-97 — the project pressure vessel engineer confirms compliance with both standards for vessel-mounted weldolets.
ASME B16.9
Factory-Made Wrought Buttwelding Fittings — the standard governing butt-weld tees (equal and reducing), elbows, reducers, and caps. ASME B16.9 reducing tees are the alternative to weldolets for large d/D branch connections. A key distinction: ASME B16.9 tees are “listed fittings” under B31.3 without an area replacement calculation for any size combination within the standard; weldolets require an area replacement calculation when d/D exceeds the MSS SP-97 pre-qualified range. For retrofit or tie-in branch connections on existing piping: a weldolet can be installed on the existing run pipe by cutting a single branch hole; installing a reducing tee requires cutting out and replacing a pipe spool — the weldolet is significantly more practical for tie-in work.
ASTM A105N / A182
Same material standards as threadolets and sockolets. ASTM A105N for carbon steel weldolets in standard to 427°C service. ASTM A182 for all alloy and SS weldolets: F304 (SS 304), F316L (SS 316L), F51 (Duplex 2205), F53 (Super Duplex 2507), F11 (1¼Cr-½Mo), F22 (2¼Cr-1Mo), F91 (9Cr-1Mo-V). EN 10204 3.1 on the forging heat certificate is mandatory for all EPC weldolet supply. The weldolet material must match the branch pipe material for the outlet butt weld — dissimilar metal welds at the weldolet outlet are possible but require separate WPS qualification per ASME IX and the approval of the responsible piping engineer.
NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156
For weldolets in H₂S sour service: ASTM A105N (normalised, ≤ 22 HRC individual piece), F316L (annealed, ≤ 22 HRC), F51 Duplex 2205 (≤ 28 HRC) are the NACE-compliant material options. The butt-weld HAZ of the weldolet outlet weld must also comply with NACE hardness limits — PWHT is typically required for carbon steel sour service weldolet outlet butt welds to control HAZ hardness to ≤ 22 HRC. For alloy steel sour service: verify NACE compliance of the specific alloy grade with the project corrosion engineer — not all alloy steel grades are NACE-compliant. F91 (P91) is not NACE-compliant in H₂S service — do not specify F91 weldolets for sour service piping.
Saddle and Outlet Weld
Design & Controls
Weldolet welding involves two separate welds — the saddle fillet weld to the run pipe and the butt weld at the outlet to the branch pipe. Both welds require qualified WPS per ASME IX, and both must be included in the NDE plan. RR Hydraulic supplies weldolets from certified forging manufacturers with full EN 10204 3.1 / 3.2 traceability.
3.1 — Material Grade Reference for Weldolets
| ASTM Grade | Material | Temp Range | NACE MR0175 | Compatible Branch Pipe | Service Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A105N | Carbon steel (norm.) | −29 to +427°C | Cond. ≤22 HRC | ASTM A106 Gr.B; A53; A333 Gr.6 | General EPC; oil/gas; utilities; steam |
| A182 F304 | SS 304 | −196 to +538°C | Good | A312 TP304; A358 Cl.1 | General chemical; food; cryogenic N₂ |
| A182 F316L | SS 316L | −196 to +454°C | Very Good | A312 TP316L | Offshore process; chloride; chemical |
| A182 F317L | SS 317L (higher Mo) | −196 to +454°C | Very Good | A312 TP317L | High-chloride; bleach; pulp/paper |
| A182 F51 | Duplex 2205 | −50 to +315°C | Very Good | A790 S31803 | Offshore sour+Cl⁻; seawater injection |
| A182 F53 | Super Duplex 2507 | −50 to +260°C | Excellent | A790 S32750 | Extreme chloride; subsea; hot seawater |
| A182 F11 | 1¼Cr-½Mo | −29 to +593°C | No | A335 P11; A691 Gr.1¼Cr | High-temp steam; reformer; FCC piping |
| A182 F22 | 2¼Cr-1Mo | −29 to +649°C | No | A335 P22; A691 Gr.2¼Cr | Very high-temp; H₂ service; HHTHP |
| A182 F91 | 9Cr-1Mo-V (P91) | −29 to +649°C | No | A335 P91; A691 Gr.9Cr | USC steam; advanced power plants |
| Inconel 625 N06625 | Ni-Cr-Mo superalloy | −196 to +980°C | Excellent | B444 N06625; B517 | Extreme corrosion + high-temp; subsea |
3.2 — Two-Weld System: Saddle and Outlet Weld Engineering
3.2.1 — Saddle (Base) Fillet Weld — Run Pipe Connection
The saddle weld attaches the weldolet base to the run pipe — a fillet weld around the full perimeter of the weldolet base saddle. This weld is identical in design and procedure requirements to the saddle weld for sockolets and threadolets. The weld must achieve full root fusion at the saddle-to-run-pipe interface — the weld root at the transition from the fitting base to the run pipe surface is the primary fatigue stress concentration for the in-plane bending moment on the branch connection. Full root fusion at this location is essential; lack of fusion at the weld root dramatically increases the effective SIF and reduces fatigue life relative to the MSS SP-97 design value.
- Saddle fit-up: Saddle bore radius matched to run pipe OD ±0.5 mm per MSS SP-97; no gaps greater than 1.6 mm anywhere around the saddle perimeter before tack welding; grind the run pipe surface to bare metal at the weld zone; verify pipe schedule and OD match the weldolet saddle bore specification before installation
- Balanced welding sequence: Tack at four equidistant points; complete the saddle fillet weld in a balanced opposing sequence (weld 0°–90°, then 180°–270°, then 90°–180°, then 270°–360°) to minimise angular distortion of the run pipe and residual stress in the weldolet body
- Weld size and profile: Fillet weld leg length = minimum of run pipe wall thickness and weldolet base wall thickness; concave or flat fillet profile preferred (convex fillet welds have higher stress concentration at the weld toe); smooth transition from weld face to run pipe surface — abrupt weld toes at the saddle perimeter are fatigue crack initiation sites
- NDE of saddle weld: Magnetic particle (MT) or liquid penetrant (PT) examination of the completed saddle fillet weld on the surface — checks for toe cracks, lack of fusion at the root, and surface porosity. MT is preferred for carbon steel and alloy steel; PT for SS and Duplex. 100% surface NDE of saddle welds for Category M, severe cyclic, and high-pressure piping classes
3.2.2 — Outlet Butt Weld — Branch Pipe Connection
- Bevel preparation: Weldolet outlet bevel machined per ASME B16.25 — standard 37.5° bevel for t ≤ 22 mm; compound bevel for heavier wall. Branch pipe end prepared to matching bevel angle. Verify that the weldolet outlet bore ID matches the branch pipe bore ID — bore mismatch > 1.6 mm requires a 1:4 taper transition on the weldolet outlet face before welding. Taper a weldolet, never taper the branch pipe end to a smaller ID than its pressure design requires
- Root gap control: Root gap per WPS (typically 2.0–4.0 mm for GTAW/SMAW root passes); fit-up verified by feeler gauge at minimum 4 positions around the circumference; uniform root gap prevents uneven root pass penetration. Excessive root gap (above WPS maximum) causes root suck-back (concavity) on the first pass; insufficient root gap causes lack of penetration at the root
- Full-penetration root pass: GTAW (TIG) root pass for all SS, Duplex, and alloy steel (F11, F22, F91) weldolet outlet butt welds — GTAW provides the best root pass profile and cleanest weld chemistry. SMAW root pass acceptable for carbon steel A105N in normal fluid service. Back-purge with argon for all SS and Duplex root passes — prevents oxidation of the weld root surface inside the branch bore (root oxidation creates a sharp notch at the weld root that is an initiation site for stress corrosion cracking in SS piping)
- RT/UT after welding: The weldolet outlet butt weld is accessible to radiographic (RT) and ultrasonic (UT) examination — this is the primary advantage over the sockolet SW outlet that cannot be examined by RT/UT. 100% RT or UT of the weldolet outlet butt weld is the standard EPC requirement for all weldolet connections in high-pressure, fatigue-critical, Category M, and severe cyclic service piping
- PWHT sequence: For alloy steel (F11/F22/F91) and carbon steel sour service weldolets where both welds require PWHT: ideally complete both the saddle weld and outlet butt weld before any PWHT, then perform one combined PWHT operation. Where construction sequencing requires separate PWHT of the saddle and outlet welds (e.g., saddle weld in fabrication shop, outlet butt weld in field after branch pipe installation): two separate PWHT operations are acceptable but each must fully cover the respective weld HAZ
3.3 — P91 / F91 Weldolet Special Welding Protocol
WPS Qualification for P91 Weldolets
Both the saddle weld (F91 weldolet to P91 run pipe — same P-No. 5C, Gr.1 to P-No. 5C, Gr.1) and the outlet butt weld (F91 weldolet to P91 branch pipe — same combination) must be qualified per ASME IX with P91-specific restrictions: matching filler metal ER90S-B9 or E9015-B9 (Cr-Mo-V matching); no E7018 or E8018 low-alloy substitution for P91 welds. The WPS must be approved by the project piping engineer with reference to EPRI TR-117073 (Guidelines for Welding Creep-Strength Enhanced Ferritic Steels) before production welding. Third-party review of P91 WPS/PQR packages is standard practice on power plant EPC projects.
Preheat, Interpass, and PWHT
P91 / F91 weldolet welding requirements: minimum preheat 200°C before any welding; maximum interpass temperature 300°C during welding; maintain above 120°C immediately after welding until PWHT commences (do not allow P91 welds to cool to room temperature before PWHT — martensite forms on cooling and hydrogen cracking can occur). PWHT: 760–790°C × 1 hour per 25 mm wall thickness minimum; cooling rate ≤ 100°C/hour from PWHT temperature to below 300°C. Post-PWHT hardness survey: both the saddle weld HAZ on the run pipe and the outlet butt weld HAZ on the branch pipe — target 180–250 HBW. Hardness results outside this range indicate incorrect PWHT and require the welding engineer’s written disposition.
Dissimilar Metal Weld (DMW) Weldolets
When a weldolet must connect P91 / F91 run pipe to a lower-alloy or SS branch pipe (a DMW at the outlet butt weld) — or when a F316L SS weldolet is installed on an A106 Gr.B carbon steel run pipe: the DMW requires separate WPS qualification per ASME IX for the dissimilar P-Number combination and the correct filler metal selection (typically an austenitic or Inconel buttering layer). DMW weldolets are encountered in: temperature boundary transitions (alloy-to-carbon-steel); corrosion boundary transitions (carbon-steel-to-SS); and process chemistry boundary transitions (process to utility). All DMW weldolet WPS qualifications must be reviewed by the responsible piping and materials engineer before production welding — the consequences of a failed DMW weld in a high-pressure system are severe.
Duplex / Super Duplex Butt Weld Controls
F51 Duplex 2205 or F53 Super Duplex 2507 weldolet outlet butt welds require the same controls as for any Duplex piping butt weld: heat input control (0.5–2.0 kJ/mm); maximum interpass temperature 150°C; over-alloyed filler metal (ER2209 for 2205; ER2594 for 2507); back-purge with 100% Ar or 98% Ar/2% N₂ for all root passes; full-penetration GTAW root. Post-weld ferrite content verification per ASTM E562 on the weld metal and HAZ cross-section (40–60% ferrite for 2205; 40–50% for 2507) — Duplex BW joints that have been over-heated (excessive heat input, interpass temperature exceeded) may have insufficient ferrite content in the weld metal, reducing corrosion resistance to levels below the base metal specification even if the chemical analysis appears correct.
Cryogenic Weldolets — Preheat-Free, Impact-Tested
F304L or F316L SS weldolets for cryogenic piping (LNG, liquid nitrogen, liquid oxygen): no preheat required for austenitic SS welding; back-purge mandatory for SS root pass; austenitic SS filler metal (ER316L or ER308L) at or below nominal base metal alloying for sensitisation resistance. Impact testing at the design minimum temperature (-196°C for LNG) on weld metal and HAZ specimens from the WPS qualification test coupon — the weld metal must achieve CVN ≥ 41 J at the design temperature to demonstrate cryogenic toughness of the weld joint. For A350 LF2 carbon steel weldolets in −46°C service: preheat 50°C minimum; low-hydrogen SMAW; CVN testing at −46°C on PQR test coupon from ASTM A370 impact tests.
RT/UT Examination of Weldolet Outlet Butt Weld
The weldolet outlet butt weld is geometrically accessible to radiographic (RT) examination — film is placed inside the branch bore and the X-ray source is positioned outside the run pipe. For small-bore weldolets (NPS 1″–2″ branch), the restricted access may limit RT to a single-wall single-image technique using a mini-focus X-ray source or isotope. Ultrasonic examination (UT) of the weldolet outlet BW joint: phased-array UT (PAUT) is the standard technique for all weldolet outlet BW joints in high-pressure steam and critical offshore piping — PAUT provides volumetric coverage of the entire weld cross-section and HAZ in a single scan, with better sensitivity to planar flaws (lack of fusion, cracks) than conventional UT. Specify PAUT in the project ITP for all weldolet outlet BW joints requiring volumetric examination.
Industry Applications
& Documentation
RR Hydraulic maintains full traceability from certified forging billets to final inspected and packed weldolet shipment. Dimensional inspection, bevel angle verification, saddle radius gauging, hardness testing, material certification, and complete EPC export documentation are standard on all project-grade weldolet supply.
4.1 — Inspection & QC Protocol
4.2 — EN 10204 Material Test Certificate Requirements
| Certificate | Content | EPC Requirement | When Mandatory |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.1 / 2.2 | Declaration / non-specific | Not acceptable for EPC process piping | Never for ASME B31.3 / B31.1 weldolets |
| 3.1 | Forging heat-traceable mech + chem | Mandatory for all EPC weldolets | All process, power, and offshore piping weldolets |
| 3.2 | 3.1 + TPI countersign | Offshore critical; NACE; nuclear; Category M | NACE sour; offshore safety-critical; nuclear; Cl.M lethal |
4.3 — Applications by Industry
High-Pressure Process and Compressor Discharge Headers
ASTM A105N (STD or XH wall class) weldolets for all branch connections NPS 2″ and above on high-pressure gas and liquid process headers in Oil & Gas, Petrochemical, and Gas Processing EPC projects. The weldolet full-penetration outlet butt weld is the code-required branch connection for all ASME B31.3 piping above Class 600# — the fillet weld of a sockolet or the threaded connection of a threadolet does not meet the piping class for these high-pressure services. On compressor discharge headers specifically: weldolets are mandatory for all branch connections because of the high-cycle compressor-induced vibration — the lower SIF of the weldolet vs stub-in or sockolet provides the fatigue life extension required to survive the compressor design life without branch connection fatigue cracking.
Offshore Platform BW Process Piping Branches
F316L or F51 Duplex 2205 weldolets for all medium and large-bore (NPS 2″–8″) branch connections on offshore platform process headers in produced water, sour crude, and wet gas piping classes that specify butt-weld connections. Duplex 2205 (F51) for combined sour + chloride service on offshore production facilities. EN 10204 3.2 with DNV or Lloyds TPI countersign for safety-critical process piping. PMI on 100% of lots; ferrite count for Duplex; individual hardness for NACE. 100% RT/UT of outlet butt welds per project ITP. Complete fabrication records including WPS reference, welder qualification number, PWHT chart, and NDE report cross-referenced to the weldolet heat number are required for all offshore safety-critical piping weldolet installations.
P91 Ultra-Supercritical Steam Piping Branches
ASTM A182 F91 (9Cr-1Mo-V) weldolets (XH or XXH wall class) for all drain, vent, and instrument branch connections NPS 2″ and above on main steam, hot reheat, and high-temperature balance-of-plant steam piping in advanced coal and gas power plants. F91 weldolets provide the matching chemical composition and creep rupture strength required for these 600°C+ service conditions — using carbon steel (A105N) or low-alloy (F11/F22) weldolets on P91 piping creates a creep-strength mismatch at the branch connection that accelerates creep damage at the weld HAZ. Full EPRI P91 welding protocol; dual PWHT qualification; 100% radiographic examination of all outlet butt welds; hardness survey post-PWHT; EN 10204 3.2 with independent TPI review for main steam piping.
Hydrogen Service and High-Temperature Alloy Piping
ASTM A182 F22 (2¼Cr-1Mo) weldolets for hydroprocessing and hydrogen service piping in refineries — hydrotreater reactor feed/effluent circuits, hydrogen recycle loops, and reformer piping at high pressure (150–250 bar) and high temperature (300–450°C). F22 is the standard material for hydrogen-containing piping above 300°C per API RP 941 (Steels for Hydrogen Service) Nelson Curves — F22 has superior hydrogen embrittlement resistance compared to carbon steel (A105N) at these elevated temperature and hydrogen partial pressure conditions. F22 weldolets: preheat 250°C; PWHT per ASME B31.3 Table 331.1.1 (P-No. 5B, Gr.1); 100% RT of outlet butt welds; EN 10204 3.1; PMI on all lots.
Nuclear Safety-Class Piping Branches (ASME III)
A182 F316L or F304 SS weldolets manufactured per ASME Section III (Rules for Construction of Nuclear Facility Components) NB/NC/ND Class requirements for nuclear safety-class piping branch connections. ASME III requires: ASME-N-stamp certification of the weldolet manufacturer; ASME III material certification per NCA-3800; N-5 Certificate of Compliance; 100% volumetric NDE (RT and UT) of all outlet butt welds; ASME III Appendix IX qualification testing of weldolet dimensions. Nuclear safety-class weldolets are among the most strictly controlled industrial forgings — the documentation package for a single nuclear weldolet lot may include over 20 separate certificates and test reports. RR Hydraulic supports nuclear procurement documentation requirements for safety-class weldolet supply.
Pipeline Mainline Tie-In Branch Connections
ASTM A105N weldolets (STD or XH wall class) for tie-in branch connections on long-distance gas and liquid transmission pipelines governed by ASME B31.8 (Gas Transmission) or B31.4 (Liquid Transportation). Pipeline tie-in weldolets enable a branch connection to be installed on an existing pipeline spool without replacing the entire pipe spool — the weldolet is installed by cutting a branch hole in the existing pipe and welding the weldolet saddle. Pipeline tie-in weldolets: matching pipeline material (API 5L Gr.B through X70 — typically equivalent ASTM A105N or A182 F42/F65 for higher-grade pipeline steels); API 1104 welding procedure qualification; 100% radiographic examination of the saddle root weld (a hot-tap or tie-in weld in a live pipeline is the most critical field weld in pipeline construction).
4.4 — Export Packaging Specification
- Weldolets individually packed per configuration (run pipe NPS × branch NPS × wall class × material) in polybag or plastic box — never mix wall classes or material grades; an XH weldolet installed where STD is specified creates an excessive weld joint mismatch that may require grinding to achieve the B16.25 bore tolerance; an F316L weldolet installed where F51 Duplex is specified creates a critical corrosion performance shortfall in sour chloride service
- Outlet bevel face protected with plastic cap or foam disc before packaging — the machined 37.5° bevel face must arrive at the fabrication shop free of rust, scale, and mechanical damage; any rust or scale on the bevel face requires grinding before root welding and may introduce weld porosity or lack of fusion at the root if not fully removed
- Saddle bore face wrapped with VCI polyfilm for carbon steel weldolets — the contoured saddle surface must arrive at site free of rust and scale for clean fit-up and full root fusion at the saddle fillet weld. VCI film protects the bare machined contour during ocean freight without requiring paint or coating that would contaminate the weld zone
- Heat number marked on every weldolet per MSS SP-97 — the traceability link to the EN 10204 3.1 MTC. For NACE and offshore critical supply: individual piece hardness result and PMI confirmation also marked on or tagged to the fitting body with the lot QC record cross-reference
- SS and Duplex weldolets in dedicated grade-labelled polybags; segregated from carbon steel hardware; iron contamination on the passivated SS bevel face causes porosity and corrosion at the weld root
- P91 / F91 weldolets in individually labelled packages with P91 caution sticker — P91 requires special welding procedure and PWHT; it must not be confused with F22 or F11 fittings by the fabrication shop
- ISPM-15 timber crates or export cartons; desiccant sachets; documentation in waterproof pocket: EN 10204 3.1/3.2 MTC, mechanical test certificate, Charpy impact (LF2/cryogenic), hardness certificate (NACE individual piece; F91 lot), bevel angle inspection report (sampled), saddle radius report (100%), dimensional report, PMI report, ferrite count (Duplex/Super Duplex), passivation certificate (SS), FAI report
4.5 — Complete EPC Project Documentation Package
| # | Document | Standard / Format | Mandatory / Conditional | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | Material Test Certificate (MTC) | EN 10204 3.1 / 3.2 | Mandatory — all EPC weldolets | Forging heat-traceable; one MTC per forging heat |
| 02 | Chemical Composition Report | Certified lab per ASTM A105N / A182 / A350 | Mandatory | All alloying elements per grade limits |
| 03 | Mechanical Properties Report | UTS, yield, elongation, reduction of area | Mandatory | Per ASTM spec; one test per forging heat |
| 04 | Charpy Impact Test Report | ASTM A370 at design min temp | Mandatory — LF2; cryogenic SS; F91 PWHT | Test temp; CVN J-values per forging heat |
| 05 | Hardness Test Report | ASTM E10 Brinell / E18 Rockwell C | Mandatory — NACE (per piece); all lots (sampled) | A105N NACE ≤ 22 HRC per piece; F51 ≤ 293 HB |
| 06 | Bevel Angle Verification Report | ASME B16.25 — angle gauge / CMM | Mandatory — sampled lot; 100% for fatigue-critical | 37.5° ± 2.5°; root face 1.6 ± 0.8 mm |
| 07 | Saddle Bore Radius Inspection Report | Radius gauge / CMM vs run pipe OD/2 | Mandatory — 100% all EPC weldolets | ±0.5 mm per MSS SP-97; 4 positions per fitting |
| 08 | Dimensional Inspection Report | Per MSS SP-97 / ASME B16.25 | Mandatory | Height, wall thickness, outlet bore, bevel, markings |
| 09 | PMI Report (XRF) | Per lot — SS / Duplex / alloy steel / Inconel | Mandatory — all non-CS lots; individual for NACE | F316L vs F304; F51 vs F53; F11 vs F22 vs F91 |
| 10 | Ferrite Content Report | ASTM E562 metallographic | Mandatory — F51 Duplex; F53 Super Duplex | 40–60% (F51); 40–50% (F53); cross-section photo |
| 11 | NACE Compliance Statement | Hardness + heat treatment declaration | Conditional — sour service | Individual Brinell ≤ 237 HB per piece; heat lot ref |
| 12 | Passivation Certificate | ASTM A967 | Mandatory — all SS and Duplex weldolets | Cu-sulphate or water immersion acceptance test |
| 13 | First Article Inspection (FAI) Report | Project-specific format | Mandatory — new configurations | All parameters including bevel angle + saddle radius |
| 14 | TPI Witness Certificate | SGS / BV / DNV / Lloyds | Conditional — EN 10204 3.2; offshore; NACE; nuclear | Co-witness; dimensional + PMI + hardness |
| 15 | ISO 9001:2015 Certificate | Third-party QMS certification | Mandatory — EPC projects | Scope covers forged branch connection fitting manufacture |
| 16 | Country of Origin + Packing List | Chamber of Commerce / item-level | Mandatory | HS tariff code; wall class; heat number per line item |
| 17 | Commercial Invoice + Bill of Lading | Per INCOTERMS 2020 | Mandatory | Freight forwarder issued |
4.6 — ISO and Quality System Compliance
ISO 9001:2015
Quality Management System covering forging billet procurement and heat traceability, hot forging process qualification (die temperature, forging ratio, billet preparation), heat treatment process control (normalise A105N; solution anneal SS/Duplex; Q+T alloy grades), saddle bore CNC machining qualification (radius tolerance vs run pipe OD), outlet CNC boring and bevel machining qualification (bore ID, bevel angle, root face per ASME B16.25), hardness testing procedure, bevel angle inspection procedure, PMI procedure, ferrite count test procedure, and full traceability from billet heat to dispatched weldolet. Mandatory for all EPC, offshore, power, and safety-critical piping weldolet procurement qualification.
MSS SP-97 / ASME B16.9 / B16.25
The three-standard framework for weldolet manufacture. MSS SP-97 governs the fitting body (reinforcement, saddle dimensions, size tables, pressure class). ASME B16.9 governs the classification of weldolets as branch connection fittings equivalent in design intent to reducing tees for BW connections. ASME B16.25 governs the outlet face bevel geometry — the interface standard that makes the weldolet outlet butt weld compatible with all standard piping BW joint preparations. All three must be referenced simultaneously on a procurement document: a weldolet is not fully specified without all three standards being cited or the fitting marking verified against all three.
ASME B31.3 / B31.1 / ASME IX
The design code / welding qualification framework for weldolet installation: ASME B31.3 (process piping) or B31.1 (power piping) sets the design requirements, NDE levels, and PWHT thresholds; ASME IX qualifies the WPS for both the saddle weld and the outlet butt weld. The full-penetration butt weld at the weldolet outlet is the single most important weld in the branch connection system — it is the weld that is subject to the maximum cyclic stress from branch vibration, and the weld that must be RT/UT examined. The combination of a qualified WPS, a qualified welder, a weldolet with verified bevel geometry, and 100% RT/UT of the completed outlet butt weld constitutes the complete quality assurance program for the most critical weld in a high-pressure weldolet branch connection.
PED 2014/68/EU / EN 13480
European regulatory framework — same applicability as for threadolets and sockolets. EN 13480-4 Clause 6.4 covers butt-weld connections including weldolet outlet butt welds — the bevel preparation requirements are consistent with ASME B16.25 (37.5° bevel, 1–3 mm root face). EN 13480-4 Clause 6.5 covers branch connections with full reference to the area replacement requirements of EN 13480-3 (Design). For CE-marked piping systems: weldolets manufactured per ASTM A182 with MSS SP-97 dimensional compliance are accepted under EN 13480 with an appropriate material equivalence statement (EN 10269 or EN 10222 cross-reference). NORSOK M-630 MDS sheets for offshore Duplex and Super Duplex weldolet applications on Norwegian Continental Shelf projects.
Submit your run pipe NPS/schedule, branch NPS/schedule, wall class, material, and quantity to RR Hydraulic for a complete, certified commercial offer.
