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Steel Grades Chart | Properties, Strength & Uses Compared
Explore our steel grades chart | properties, strength & uses compared for your CNC machining projects.
Read GuideFind AWS welding symbols fast. This chart covers the most common weld types. Each row shows the symbol, what it means on the arrow side, and where you use it. Built for welders, engineers, and shop techs.
| Weld Type ▲ | Symbol ▲ | Arrow Side ▲ | Other Side ▲ | Common Use ▲ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fillet | Weld in the corner on the arrow side | Weld in the corner on the other side | T-joints, lap joints, corner joints. The most common weld type. | |
| Square Groove | Square-edged groove on the arrow side | Square-edged groove on the other side | Butt joints on thin metal. No bevel needed. | |
| V-Groove | V-shaped groove on the arrow side | V-shaped groove on the other side | Butt joints on thick plate. Both edges are beveled. | |
| Bevel Groove | One edge beveled on the arrow side | One edge beveled on the other side | Butt joints where only one plate gets a bevel. | |
| U-Groove | U-shaped groove on the arrow side | U-shaped groove on the other side | Thick plate butt joints. Uses less filler than a V-groove. | |
| J-Groove | J-shaped groove on the arrow side | J-shaped groove on the other side | Thick plate joints. Only one edge is curved. | |
| Flare V | Flare-V on the arrow side | Flare-V on the other side | Two round or curved parts meet. Like pipe to pipe. | |
| Flare Bevel | Flare-bevel on the arrow side | Flare-bevel on the other side | One round part meets a flat part. Like a tube to a plate. | |
| Plug / Slot | Fill hole or slot on the arrow side | Fill hole or slot on the other side | Fill a hole or slot to join overlapping parts. | |
| Spot | Spot weld on the arrow side | Spot weld on the other side | Sheet metal. Quick point welds that hold parts together. | |
| Seam | Seam weld on the arrow side | Seam weld on the other side | Sheet metal. A continuous line of spot welds for a seal. | |
| Back / Backing | Backing weld on the arrow side | Backing weld on the other side | Reinforces the root of a groove weld from the back. | |
| Surfacing | Build up material on the surface | Not used on other side | Add material to a surface for wear resistance or repair. | |
| Edge | Weld the edges together on the arrow side | Weld the edges together on the other side | Join thin edges that are side by side. Like sheet metal flanges. |
Every weld symbol on a drawing has the same basic parts. Learn these parts once, and you can read any weld symbol.
These extra symbols go with the basic weld symbol. They tell the welder more about how to finish or apply the weld.
A circle at the junction of the arrow and reference line. Run the weld the full way around the joint.
A flag at the junction. This weld happens in the field, not in the shop. Do it on site during assembly.
A convex curve on the opposite side. The weld must fully melt through the root of the joint.
A rectangle on the other side. A backing strip sits behind the weld to stop melt-through and support the root.
A straight line over the weld symbol. Grind or finish the weld smooth and flat with the base metal.
A curved bump over the weld. Leave the weld bead raised above the surface.
A dip curve over the weld. Shape the weld bead so it curves inward, below the surface.
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Upload CAD for Instant QuoteStart with the reference line. It is the flat line in the middle. The arrow points to the joint. The weld type symbol sits on or below the reference line. If the symbol is below the line, the weld goes on the arrow side. If it is above the line, the weld goes on the other side. The tail holds extra notes like process or spec info.
The arrow points to one side of the joint. That is the arrow side. The opposite side of the joint is called the other side. If the weld symbol is below the reference line, you weld on the arrow side. If the symbol is above the reference line, you weld on the other side. If symbols appear on both sides, you weld both sides.
A small circle where the reference line meets the arrow means weld all around. This tells the welder to run the weld the full way around the joint. You see this on pipes, tubes, and parts that need a seal on every side.
A fillet weld joins two surfaces at a right angle. It makes a triangle-shaped bead in the corner where the parts meet. Fillet welds are the most common type. Use them for T-joints, lap joints, and corner joints. They are strong, easy to make, and do not need edge prep.
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