Why Your Tube Mill Keeps Having Weld Problems — And How to Fix It

❗ Are You Facing These Problems in Your Production?

Many tube mill customers come to us with similar complaints:

  • “Our weld seams look fine, but fail testing.”
  • “Quality is unstable — sometimes good, sometimes bad.”
  • “We adjusted welding parameters, but nothing really improved.”

If this sounds familiar, you're not alone.

In ERW production, weld defects such as incomplete fusion, cracks, porosity, and misalignment are very common But the key point is:

👉 Most weld problems are not caused by the welding machine itself.

 Welded Tube Mill Factory.jpg


⚠️ The Real Problem: It Starts Before Welding

From real production cases, weld failures usually begin earlier in the process:

  • Strip not aligned during forming
  • Uneven tension during feeding
  • Poor edge condition before welding

When the strip edges do not meet properly, even perfect welding parameters cannot produce a strong seam.

Research shows that poor forming and edge misalignment directly reduce weld strength and cause defects .


🔍 What Is Really Causing Your Weld Defects?

1. Misalignment Starts Earlier Than You Think

A lot of weld problems actually begin in the forming section.

If the strip isn’t feeding straight or shifts during forming, the edges simply won’t meet correctly at the welding point. And once that happens, no amount of welding adjustment can fully fix it.

What you’ll typically see:

  • Weak or inconsistent weld seams
  • Edge offset or lap welding
  • Reduced overall pipe strength

This is one of the most common — and most overlooked — reasons behind weld failure.


2. Heat Input Isn't Just a Setting — It's a Balance

Welding isn't about “more power” or “less power.” It's about matching heat with line speed.

  • Too little heat → edges don't fully fuse
  • Too much heat → overheating, inclusions, surface defects

In real production, insufficient heat is often the hidden reason behind cracks and poor fusion. It may look fine at first, but problems show up later during testing or use.


3. Squeeze Force: The Silent Factor

People tend to focus on temperature, but pressure is just as important.

After heating, the metal needs the right squeeze force to form a solid bond.

  • Too little pressure → oxides remain → weak weld
  • Too much pressure → metal gets pushed out → misalignment or internal defects

Getting this balance right is critical, yet often underestimated on the shop floor.


4. Equipment Problems Don’t Always Announce Themselves

Sometimes, the issue isn't process — it's mechanical.

Things like:

  • Worn forming rolls
  • Damaged bearings
  • Unstable squeeze rollers

These don’t always cause obvious failures right away. Instead, they create small fluctuations that gradually turn into unstable weld quality.

That's why some lines produce “random” defects that are actually not random at all.


5. Material Condition Matters More Than You Expect

Even if everything else is correct, dirty or poor-quality strip can ruin the weld.

Common issues include:

  • Rust
  • Oil contamination
  • Edge burrs

These prevent proper fusion and often lead to porosity or inclusions in the weld seam.


The Real Solution: Fix the Process, Not Just the Weld

Experienced manufacturers don’t just tweak welding parameters — they stabilize the entire line.

Here’s what actually works in practice:

  • Keep strip feeding stable and centered
  • Ensure proper forming and edge alignment
  • Match welding power with production speed
  • Maintain consistent squeeze force
  • Clean strip edges before welding
  • Regularly inspect rolls and bearings

When these factors are under control, weld quality becomes consistent — almost naturally.


What Happens If You Ignore These Issues?

It usually doesn’t fail immediately — but the cost shows up quickly:

  • Higher scrap rates
  • More customer complaints
  • Failed inspections and rework
  • Rising production costs

And in a competitive market, even small weld defects can cost you orders — or worse, long-term customers.

🚀 Let’s Solve It Together

If your tube mill is facing:

  • unstable weld quality
  • unexplained defects
  • high rejection rates

👉 The problem may not be where you think it is.


👉 Contact Us

We don’t just supply tube mills —
we help you find the real cause of your production problems and fix them.

👉 Send us your pipe size, material, and problem description
We’ll give you a practical solution based on real production experience.