Inkomodius
Bronze Member
I must agree with everyone who says not to quench, the only time I have quenched is if the engineer has spec'd it in the weld procedure. Which has to this time been never. And as far as quenching between passes, that is a lot of thermal cycling before it ever sees a load. Quenching causes internal stress fractures at the microscopic level, and vibration and shock loading turn them into cracks, turning into a failure. Right now I build bridges, I have built trailers, been on a pipeline, and in most cases if the atmospheric temp is to low you have to pre and post weld heat treat them. And that includes mild steel. This question is best left for an engineer but my thoughts are if your going to invest time and money into something, let it cool and do it right the first time.