...
WPQs can be thought of as "what was done by a specific welder and what that qualifies him to" in terms of welding. There will typiclaly be at least one WPQ for every PQR if not more. Generally there will be more WPQs than any other document type. The first WPQ made after teh the PQR is typically that of the Welder that welded the coupon. The PQR essentially allows the company Company to do "x" and the WPQ allows the Welder to do "y". The WPQ can be thought of as a combination of the PQR and the WPS for one specific Welder as it holds both the Actual Values and the Range Qualified based on those values. The same basic WPQ many however be copied for multipel multiple welders (allowing many welders to have similar qualification ranges to allow flexibility in management). Each WPQ is associated with just 1 Welder in ProWrite but WPQ number can be duplicated across WPQs so every welder in a shop may have their own "WPQ 6".
They
As indicated above the first WPQ is also a PQR typically. Following that WPQ other coupons will be WPQs only. Just as with PQRs they are welded on "test coupons" (physical components joined together made of plate or pipe) that are typically destructively or radio-graphically tested to assure compliance with a given specification/Code. A "Bend Test" where the coupon is bent in a given direction to assure any failure of the coupon occurs above a given value and in a given portion of the coupon (e.g. above the base metals tensile strength with the failure in the base metal not the weld metal). PQRs WPQs are used as "building blocks" or "source material" to construct WPSs that are then use for production welds by qualified and current (i.e., non-expired) welders.PQRs are preformed by Welders/Weld Operators so a WPQ and a PQR would typically both exist in ProWrite for a given coupon.to build Welders qualification ranges and can be analyzed to show a welder is qualified to a given WPS even if that WPS is not assoicated with the WPQ or PQR.
In ProWrite S9 a single PQR can be used to make one to n WPSs and multiple PQRs can be combined to create a WPS (increasing thickness ranges on the WPS for example). From one to three CEI Processes are supported on a PQR with a "CEI Process" being a combination of process value (e.g. GTAW, GMAW, etc.) and process variables (e.g., Filler Metal, Shielding Gas, Bead Type, etc.). A PQR with multiple Processes can be used to create a single Process WPS or Processes from multiple PQRs can be selectively combined to create a single WPS. In ProWrite D1.1 WPSs can be made from PQRs or as stand alone Pre-Qualified or qualified by Code documents.