Stud welding: everything you need to know

What - how - on what - with what - 12 questions - 12 answers - the most important topic sections give you a quick, concise and easily understandable insight into the subject of stud welding.

You want to place a screw or bolt onto or through sheet metal and have no idea?
You want to save time and money when welding and don't want to see the welding spot?
-> "Stud Welding creates invisible connections".
Stud Welding? How does this actually work and what do I need for it?
What can be achieved with stud welding?
Don't know which method will best solve your problem?
Want to know how strong the welded joint is?
You don't want to invest a lot of time and effort in an elaborate welder's examination - stud welding can be performed by anyone - procedures and equipment technology are quick to learn and easy to master...
Time is money - but how long does the welding process actually take?
Weld studs? What dimensions and shapes are there for my application?

Looking for new ways in your production, need more effectiveness and efficiency in your production and require a high quality welded joint? We offer you solutions - welding processes - welding elements and equipment technology for your application.

Stud welding

Drawn Arc Stud Welding - unrivalled economic efficiency

Drawn Arc Stud Welding ("stud welding") is a particularly economical welding process for joining round-shaped metallic parts (studs / welding studs / welding elements) with metallic workpieces such as sheet metal, profiles and pipes. Every day, millions of welding studs are joined via stud welding processes in many areas of the metal industry. The simple handling of the equipment technology plays a significant role in the spread of stud welding. The decisive factors, however, are the design and economic advantages (see Table 1) for the connection "screw to sheet metal" compared to other welding and fastening methods such as:

  • Metal inert gas welding process (MIG/MAG/WIG)
  • Clinching / Riveting
  • gluing

High Profitability
Huge savings in costs and time

Construction Advantages
New design possibilities

Preparation

  • Only one step (no drilling, countersinking, tapping)

High strength joint

  • Complete surface area coverage
  • High strength joint (welded connection higher then the strength of the stud and work piece)

Only one sided access is necessary

Weldable on very thin metal thicknesses

Different material combinations possible

High quality welding process: No riveting, gluing, screwing

Production

  • Simple, speedy handling = High Productivity
  • Easy to automate
  • High duty cycle through very short welding times (max. 1s)

Post Welding

  • Coating on the rear remains under certain conditions (no thermal marking)

  • Backside of high-alloyed sheets unchanged under certain conditions (no geometric marking)
  • Very short welding times minimize thermal energy input and thus distortion or backside markings

Welding Elements / Studs

  • Low costs through the use of standardized studs / welding elements

Welding Elements / Studs

  • Besides huge range of standardized welding elements / studs application and customer specific studs / welding elements possible

Equipment Technology

  • Comparitively low aquisition costs combined with unbeatable cost/benefit ratio

Equipment Technology

  • mobile, compact and easy-to-use

Stud welding is in many areas the most economical joining technique for fastening screw- or stud-shaped components and often the only technical solution for joining elements to thin sheet metal.

Where is stud welding used?

Stud welding can be used everywhere in metal construction and the metalworking industry and has proven itself for decades in welding threaded studs, internal threaded bushes or pins securely and cost-effectively to sheet metal - "Stud welding creates invisible connections".

Range of application extends from steel construction, bridge construction, composite construction and facade construction to power station, industrial furnace construction, general mechanical engineering and apparatus construction, vehicle construction and shipbuilding, boiler construction, tank construction and plant engineering to the household and electrical industries.

Stud

Areas of application in metal construction

- Enclosures, apparatus and switch cabinet construction
- Electrical industry
- Vending machines (beverage, food, cigarette vending machines)
- Household appliances, commercial kitchens, food industry, catering
- Laboratory and medical technology
- Fittings
- Facade engineering
- Insulation technology (climate insulation)
- "unmarked rear side"
- Vehicle construction
- Door, window and facade construction
- Steel construction
- Shipbuilding
- Thermal insulation

What is stud welding?

Definition

Stud welding refers to the joining of circular-shaped parts (studs) with flat workpieces by means of a welding arc and the application of a pressing force. The zones are joined in the liquid state of the welding zone. No filler material is used.

How does stud welding work?

During stud welding, an arc is ignited between one end of the stud and the workpiece. Both joining partners are melted and then joined under low contact pressure. The stud welding process usually takes less than a second.

Stud welding can be used for both round and rectangular cross-sections. In addition to the stud welding which is widely used and standardised in DIN EN ISO 13918, a large number of welding elements according to customer-specific or factory standards can be found in the various metal-processing industries.

What is required for stud welding?

For stud welding you need

  • A special (welding) power source -> power unit The power source implements the control system for providing welding energy and coordinating the movement device
  • A special movement device -> welding gun or welding head
  • Welding current cables and connections
  • Chuck for holding the stud
  • Welding element -> stud
  • Technical accessories (e.g. foot assembly for shielding gas)
Stud welding

Anyone can stud weld.

Equipment technology and processes are easy to master

The process runs automatically. In this sense, there is no "welder" but an operator. The operator has no direct influence on the welding process, as is the case with manual electrode and MSG welding.

As with all joining and welding processes, the achievement of sufficient joining quality in arc stud welding is also influenced by a large number of parameters. In addition to a certain manual dexterity and training of the operator, it is therefore important that the process runs smoothly and that the welding task is taken into account.

An extensive range of stud welding equipment and accessories are offered to solve customer-specific welding tasks "stud to metal". The range extends from simple, manual equipment with stud welding guns to comprehensive CNC stud welding systems.

Buying a stud welding machine

The best possible basis for ensuring the process and quality of the welded product is provided if the supplier can offer a system solution "process responsibility / quality = equipment technology + welding element". In case of questions or problems, there is only one contact point for the quality-influencing criteria "equipment technology" and "welding element".

However, the product liability of the manufacturer can only refer to the delivered devices and / or studs, but not to the quality of the welded product (studs to sheet metal). This is determined by many influencing factors during the welding process.

Equipment Technology

+

Welding Element

+

Process

=

Process responsibility / Quality

Which Stud Welding Process?

Depending on the heat input, various processes and process variants with different significance have developed. The different processes of drawn arc stud welding can be differentiated according to:

Type of arc ignition

  • capacitor discharge stud welding
  • drawn arc stud welding

Both processes differ in the ignition geometry of the bolts, the process sequence, the equipment technology and (partly) in the field of application. Both processes use direct current - but different energy sources, see Figure 2.

Type of energy source used

  • Capacitor discharge
  • Transformer / rectifier, inverter

the length of the welding time

  • approx. 1 - 3 ms -> capacitor discharge
  • approx. 5 - 100 ms -> short-cycle ignition
  • > 100 ms -> drawn arc ignition

or the welding pool protection used

  • without weld pool protection (NP - No Protection)
  • with inert gas (SG - Shielding Gas)
  • with ceramic ring (CF - Ceramic ferrule)

Depending on the customer, component, material and process requirements, different stud welding processes can be used and their decisive quality criteria can be used. The optimum working ranges of the different stud welding processes differ, among other things, in the diameter of the welding element, in the materials and component surfaces used, the sheet thickness and working position, the required connected load and the process requirements (automation, quality and reproducibility, workshop or construction site conditions), etc.

Hubzündung

Kurzzeithubzündung

Spitzenzündung

ISO 4063

783

784

786

Power Source

Transformer
Inverter

Transformer
Inverter

Capacitor Discharge

Stud Diameter d

M6 – M24, Ø 3 – 25 mm

M3 – M10, Ø 3 – 10 mm

M3 – M8, Ø 3 – 8 mm

Stud Weld Base Geometry

Ignition Angle 22,5°

Flange
Ignition Angle 7°

Ignition Tip, Flange
Ignition Angle 3°

Stud Type ISO 13918

PD (MD) / RD / UD / ID / SD

PS / US / IS

PT / UT / IT

Min. Base Material Thickness s

0,25 d; > 1 mm

0,125 d; > 0,6 mm

0,1 d; > 6 mm

Welding Current I-max [A]

300 - 3.000

2.000

10.000

Welding Time t [ms]

> 100

< 100

1 - 3

Electrical Connection

400V, 32 to 125 AT (slow blow)

400V, 32 to 125 AT (slow blow)

230 V

Weld Base Protection

Shielding Gas (SG) / CF

none (NP) / Shielding Gas (SG)

None (NP)

Base Material
(ISO 14555)

Steel, Galvanized Steel
CrNi-Steel

Steel, Galvanized Steel
CrNi-Steel,
Aluminium

Steel, Galvanized Steel
CrNi-Steel,
Aluminium,Brass

Criteria

Stud Welding

Drawn Arc

Capacitor Discharge

with ceramic ferrule

with shielding gas

Short-Cycle / SC

Stud Diameter

Ø Stud ≤ 8 mm

Ø Stud 8 - 12 mm

max. M10

Ø Stud > 12 mm

max. M16

max. M12

Base Material

Unalloyed Steel, Mild Steel

CrNi-Steel,
Stainless Steel, corrosion free

Aluminium / AlMg3

max. M10

SC-Studs

max. M6

Brass / CuZn37

max. M6

Base Material

Rust Film, Scale, Primer

galvanized

Base Material Thickness s

Sheet Metal
s app. 0,6 - 2 mm
s > 0,1 x d

s > 1/4 x d

s > 1/8 x d
thermal marking

Sheet Metal
s ca. 0,6 - 2 mm
s > 0,1 x d

s > 1/4 x d
thermal marking

Heavier Plate Material
s > 5 mm
s > 0,1 x d

Surface

Requirements

High Process and Quality Requirements

Automotive

Connection 230 V

max. M8
HBS Visar 650

max. M8
HBS Visar 650

max. M8
HBS Visar 650

Construction Site Use

precisely shaped
welding bead

max. M10

With Shielding Gas

Spatter Ring

Thin Material no rear side marking

Automation

well suited

The stud diameter, stud base ignition geometry, application and weld pool protection determine the welding process.

suitable with limitations

not suitable

How strong is the join?

If the welding is carried out carefully, properly and professionally, it can be assumed that the welded joint can withstand a greater static load than the stud or component. The fracture occurs when the load limit is exceeded outside the welding zone in the stud or in the base sheet material.

Therefore, the characteristic values of stud and plate are decisive for the strength calculation; the load-bearing capacity of the weld does not have to be taken into account mathematically.

The breaking force can thus be calculated from the minimum tensile strength of the materials, see also Notes on the calculation of stud welds in DVS 0967.

When calculating stud welded joints, a distinction must be made depending on the case of application and the applicable rules and regulations. A distinction is made between static or dynamic loads, compression, tension, bending or torsion. The design of the studs must therefore be carried out in such a way that the serviceability and load safety of the entire component are guaranteed.

For bolts according to DIN EN ISO 13918, the characteristic values for calculation - the yield strength (Rp / fy,b,k) and the tensile strength (Rm / fu,b,k) - are specified in the applicable material tables.

Calculation reference surface

Abbreviations

DIN EN ISO 13918

Stud Type

Welding base diameter (smallest cross-section)

RD

Threaded studs with reduced base

Stress Area

Threaded Studs

MD, PD, FD, PS, PT

Threaded Studs

Pin

Internally threaded pin

Shear Connectors

Available stud shapes?

The geometric characteristics outside the welding plane and the stud length are irrelevant for the welding process.

The design of the required welding geometry or stud tip depends on the welding process used. The longer the welding time and thus the melting volume, the more tapered the stud tip is. For example, the ignition cone of welding elements for tip ignition is flatter than that of welding elements for drawn arc ignition.

Geometry

Outer Diameter

Inner Diameter

Pin

(Function)

Code Identification

(DIN EN ISO 13918)

P

(Pitch)

I

(Internal thread)

U

(Unthreaded)

The characteristics outside the welding plane and the stud length are irrelevant for the welding process.

The design of the stud base geometry or stud tip depends on the welding process used. The longer the welding time and thus the melting volume, the more tapered the stud tip is. For example, the ignition cone of welding elements for tip ignition is flatter than that of welding elements for drawn arc ignition.

Process

Capacitor Discharge

Short-Cycle

Drawn Arc

Code Identification

(DIN EN ISO 13918)

T

Tip Ignition

S

Short-Cycle

D

Drawn Arc

The stud designation then consists of the combination "code letter geometry" and "code letter method".

Thus, for example, a PT stud is a threaded stud (external thread) for tip ignition.

Note:

  • The welding process determines the welding geometry.
  • The ignition geometry of the stud influences the process by its shape.
  • The component function determines the external geometry.

Drawn-Arc stud welding - Ceramic ring auxiliary equipment

Stud types for drawn arc ignition with ceramic ring have a pressed-in aluminium ball at the tip in order to ignite the arc more easily and to deoxidise the weld pool.

A ceramic ring is used

  • for studs larger than 12 mm diameter (welding diameter)
  • when welding in constrained positions (vertical wall, overhead)
  • when welding under construction site conditions
  • Disadvantage: not suitable for automated series production

The ceramic ring must be selected to match the stud and is generally always delivered with the welding element.

Industry Specific / Customer Specific

In addition, there are a large number of non-standardized, industry-specific welding elements. The welding and functional surface geometry is designed according to the application. Examples of this can be found in automotive engineering, where millions of fastening elements with coarse threads or lacquer grooves are used, in switch cabinet and device construction with welded earthing angles or in power plant and plant construction with fastening elements for thermal insulation.

Which stud diameter and stud length can be welded?

for tip ignition

M3 – M8
Ø3 to 8 mm

for short cycle

M5 – M10
Ø5 to 10 mm

for drawn arc

M6 – M24
Ø6 to 25 mm

The pin length is limited by the following criteria:

Minimum stud length: The minimum stud length results from the required insertion depth for sufficient fixing of the stud in the stud holder plus the required projection for the required formation of the welding bead as well as a material and diameter-dependent safety tolerance.

Maximum stud length: The maximum stud length is theoretically unlimited, but depends on the equipment required for welding. The stand must be long enough to support the stud sufficiently and the gun must be able to move the (higher) stud weight according to the welding task.

Stud length to stud diameter ratio: Especially for applications that require automatic separation and feeding, the stud diameter or flange diameter to stud length ratio must not be 1:1 in order to avoid rotating the stud during separation or feeding.

Stud Material

ø3

ø4

ø5

ø6

ø7.1

M3

M4

M5

M6

m8

Steel

4.8

Stainless Steel

A2-50

Aluminium

AlMg3

Brass

CuZn37

Which materials are weldable?

In principle, the same rules apply to the materials as to conventional arc welding processes

  • Always weld materials of the same type.
  • Due to the extremely fast temperature rise and cooling processes (arc burning time < 1s), there is a risk of hardening of steel due to embrittlement. The carbon content C of the materials to be welded (stud and base material) should therefore be < 0.17%.

How long does the welding process last?

ca. 1 – 3 ms

capacitor discharge

CD

ca. 5 – 100 ms

short-cycle

SC

ca. 100 ms – 1 s

drawn arc

ARC

Compared to work piece handling or feeding times for the welding element, the actual welding process is very short.

Which type of welding surface is required?

The surface of the materials must be clean and metallically bright.

The electrical conductivity must be given attention in particular at the contact points - stud / work piece and ground connection / work piece.

Paint, rust, scale, grease or oil or other coatings unsuitable for welding (e.g. anodised) must be removed from the weld area (mechanically or chemically).

In particular, galvanized component surfaces must be checked for weldability.

With very short welding times of < 50 ms, the surface must be cleaned particularly carefully.

In the case of aluminium, existing oxide layers should be removed.

Rear side markings

Even with such short welding times, deformations or markings on stainless steel or aluminium up to a sheet thickness of 4 mm often cannot be avoided. Visibility is strongly dependent on the structure of the reverse side, especially on highly polished or lacquered sheets. In the sheet thickness range of 0.6 mm, the shrinkage of the weld pool always results in a thermally induced indentation.

Thermal rear side markings, such as tarnish points, do not usually occur in capacitor discharge ignition, but only in drawn arc ignition, where welding times are significantly longer. Characteristics and visibility depend, among other things, on the material thickness, the time energy input / stud diameter and the material.

How to automate stud welding?

The user's desire to reduce costs while simultaneously increasing product quality and process reproducibility quickly leads to the topic of automation.

In addition to the criteria listed in Table 8, it is necessary to define customer-specific characteristics in the specifications for an automation system, such as

  • Stud dimensions and geometries
  • Number of different studs (dimensions, material)
  • Number of (different) work pieces (number, dimensions, heights)
  • Traversing speeds, position and repeat accuracy
  • Machine safety (housing, noise protection)
  • Workplace requirements and ease of use

HBS - everything from a single source

HBS supplies a complete range - from manual welding guns with automatic stud feed and semi-automatic systems to fully automatic stud welding systems and robot applications; from technical advice to on-site service, from stud to complete system.

Request the HBS product overview "Automatic stud welding systems".

This could also be of interest to you

Sources

[1] DIN EN ISO 13918 (1998)
Schweißen - Bolzen und Keramikringe zum Lichtbogenbolzenschweißen

[2] DIN EN ISO 14555 (2007)
Schweißen Lichtbogenbolzenschweißen von metallischen Werkstoffen

[3] DIN EN ISO 14175 (alt: DIN EN 439)
Schweißzusätze – Schutzgase zum Lichtbogenschweißen und Schneiden

[4] Merkblatt DVS 0902
Lichtbogenbolzenschweißen mit Hubzündung
DVS-Verlag, Düsseldorf

[5] Merkblatt DVS 0903
Kondensatorentladungs-Bolzenschweißen mit Spitzenzündung
DVS-Verlag, Düsseldorf

[6] Merkblatt DVS 0904
Hinweise für die Praxis – Lichtbogenbolzenschweißen
DVS-Verlag, Düsseldorf

[7] Merkblatt DVS 0967
Berechnung von Bolzenschweißverbindungen
DVS-Verlag, Düsseldorf

[8] R. Trillmich; W. Welz
Bolzenschweißen, Grundlagen und Anwendung
DVS Fachbuchreihe Schweißtechnik, Band 133,
DVS-Verlag, Düsseldorf, 1997 / DVS Media GmbH, Düsseldorf, 2014

[9] N.N.
Firmenunterlagen
HBS Bolzenschweiss-Systeme GmbH & Co.KG, 85221 Dachau

[10] SFI aktuell. (2015). SFI aktuell, DVS Media GmbH, Düsseldorf

[11] Klier, R.; Nitschke-Pagel,Th; Parsi, A.
WEKA Media - Praxiswissen Schweißaufsicht