Can anyone tell me to what standard the welding symbols in inventor are based on ie is it AWS A2.4 (American welding society) or BS EN 22553 Latest
revision.
Are the welding symbols based on a combination of both or just a generic standard.
kelly.young has edited your subject line for clarity: Welding symbols
Can anyone tell me to what standard the welding symbols in inventor are based on ie is it AWS A2.4 (American welding society) or BS EN 22553 Latest
revision.
Are the welding symbols based on a combination of both or just a generic standard.
kelly.young has edited your subject line for clarity: Welding symbols
According to the "Comments" field for the Weld Symbol style in the Style and Standard Editor, it is based on AWS/ANSI A2.4-93.
This is from the default "Weld Symbol (ANSI)" style in Inventor. My Style Library has been migrated several times, so the release year this corresponds to is somewhat indeterminate - possibly as old as Inventor 2010.
According to the "Comments" field for the Weld Symbol style in the Style and Standard Editor, it is based on AWS/ANSI A2.4-93.
This is from the default "Weld Symbol (ANSI)" style in Inventor. My Style Library has been migrated several times, so the release year this corresponds to is somewhat indeterminate - possibly as old as Inventor 2010.
It depends on what Styles standard you are looking at
ANSI - AWS/ANSI A2.4-93
BSI, ISO and DIN - ISO 2553 - 1984
GB - GB 324-88
JIS - JIS Z 3021 - 1987
All the above are taken from the Styles and Standard Editor Library supplied by default with Inventor 2018
John Hackney, Retired
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It depends on what Styles standard you are looking at
ANSI - AWS/ANSI A2.4-93
BSI, ISO and DIN - ISO 2553 - 1984
GB - GB 324-88
JIS - JIS Z 3021 - 1987
All the above are taken from the Styles and Standard Editor Library supplied by default with Inventor 2018
John Hackney, Retired
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.
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