17.9 Certification In More Than One Welding Code Or Standard
David Colameco, M.Ed.
Becoming a certified or qualified welder will open doors for your welding career. Most small shops, for instance, do not require their welders be certified because they are not fabricating weldments to a specific code; plus most welding codes have requirements for you to weld in that process on a regular basis. Therefore, the choice to obtain certification is a personal decision if you are not going to weld that process and material. The same goes for the decision to qualify in more than one code or standard.
Welding Codes and Standards Working Together
It is common for welding codes and standards committee members to communicate with related committees from other societies and organizations. This allows for greater perspective on the issues and directions that different segments of the welding industry are facing. For instance, there are committee members from AWS and ASME who concurrently sit on welding committees for both organizations.
In many cases, organizations and their codes and standards work well together. As was seen with AISC and even ABS, those welding standards and codes reference AWS and ASME for structural and pressure vessels and piping, respectively.
Getting Certified to a Different Code or Standard Than Your Career Direction
Not every employer will have the same view on certification. If you have a chance to obtain certification in a code such as WABO, that may provide you an advantage in a job interview even if WABO is not applicable to that employer or the work you would be doing. An argument that you could make to an employer is that qualification in one welding code shows that you have the ability to become proficient to the standards within a code and, if given the opportunity, can become certified to another welding code or standard.