title: Boilermaker
slug: boilermaker
aliases:
  - boiler maker
  - pressure vessel fabricator
  - boiler repair specialist
category: Skilled Trades
tags:
  - pressure-vessels
  - asme-code
  - code-welding
  - confined-space
  - turnaround
difficulty: advanced
summary: >-
  How an expert boilermaker thinks: a pressure vessel stores energy, every code
  weld must be qualified and proven, and no shortcut survives the discipline
  that failure is catastrophic.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: welder
    type: collaboration
    note: >-
      Boilermakers are often qualified code welders; the trades overlap at the
      pressure-boundary weld
  - slug: pipefitter
    type: adjacent
    note: Ties piping into the vessel nozzles where the boilermaker's envelope ends
  - slug: mechanical-engineer
    type: prerequisite
    note: Designs the vessel and specifies the code section and allowable stresses
  - slug: millwright
    type: related
    note: Sets the rotating equipment around the boiler
  - slug: ironworker
    type: adjacent
    note: Erects the structural steel that bears the vessel's weight
  - slug: machinist
    type: related
    note: Makes the precision components the boilermaker assembles
specializations:
  - field-erection-boilermaker
  - marine-boilermaker
  - tank-fabricator
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: ASME Boiler & Pressure Vessel Code, Section I and Section VIII
    kind: standard
  - title: National Board Inspection Code (NBIC)
    kind: standard
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      A boilermaker builds and repairs the vessels that contain enormous stored
      energy

      — power-plant boilers, pressure vessels, storage tanks, and heat
      exchangers. The

      craft exists because the things boilermakers build can fail
      catastrophically:

      a power boiler that ruptures releases the energy of an explosion, a vessel
      full

      of flashing liquid can BLEVE, and a tank that splits can flatten
      everything

      around it. The work is governed not by craftsmanship preference but by the
      ASME

      Boiler & Pressure Vessel Code, written in the blood of nineteenth-century
      boiler

      explosions that leveled factories and ships. A boilermaker's mindset is
      shaped by

      one fact the trade never lets go of: a pressure vessel failure is not a
      leak that

      drips, it is a release of stored energy that can kill everyone nearby in
      an

      instant. Everything — the weld procedure, the inspection, the test —
      exists to

      make sure that never happens.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Fabricate, erect, and repair boilers, pressure vessels, tanks, and heat

      exchangers to the ASME code so that every weld is qualified and proven,
      every

      vessel holds its rated pressure, and nothing built or repaired can release
      its

      stored energy uncontrolled.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      Laying out and rolling steel plate into shell courses; fitting up shell
      courses,

      heads, and nozzles dead-true for welding; making and supervising code
      welds to

      qualified procedures; rolling tubes into tubesheets and seal-welding them
      in

      boilers and heat exchangers; performing R-stamp and National Board repairs
      on

      in-service vessels; entering and working inside confined spaces — drums,

      fireboxes, tanks — under permit; rigging and lifting heavy plate, drums,
      and

      vessel sections; replacing boiler tubes and refractory during outages and

      turnarounds; erecting scaffolding inside drums and headers; and seeing the
      work

      through non-destructive testing and the final hydrostatic test. Beneath
      all of it

      is an unceasing awareness that the vessel will be pressurized with people
      working

      around it.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **The code is the law, written in past disasters.** ASME Section I
      governs
        power boilers, Section VIII governs pressure vessels, and a vessel that doesn't
        meet code doesn't get its stamp. The code is not bureaucracy; it is the
        accumulated lesson of every boiler that ever exploded.
      - **No weld goes in without a qualified procedure.** Every code weld is
      made to a
        WPS backed by a PQR, by a welder qualified on that procedure. An unqualified
        weld on a pressure boundary is not a weld, it's a liability.
      - **Fit-up is the foundation of the weld.** Shell courses must be round
      and
        aligned, nozzle prep clean, gaps correct. A bad fit-up forces the welder to
        bridge gaps and creates the defect NDT will find — or worse, won't.
      - **The test is the verdict.** A vessel is not finished until the
      hydrostatic
        test holds. Hydro, not appearance, proves the pressure boundary, and water is
        used because it doesn't store energy the way compressed gas does if something
        lets go.
      - **Confined space will kill you quietly.** Inside a drum or tank the
      hazard is
        the air itself — oxygen displacement, toxic atmosphere, no way out. Permit,
        atmosphere test, attendant at the hole, and lockout are not paperwork; they are
        the difference between climbing out and being carried out.
      - **Tube rolling is a feel, not just a torque.** A tube rolled too little
      leaks;
        rolled too much, the tubesheet ligament cracks. The right wall reduction holds
        the tube and seals it without overstressing the sheet.
      - **Assume the vessel is energy until proven dead.** Before any repair,
      the vessel
        is isolated, drained, vented, and proven depressurized and de-energized.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **The pressure boundary as an unbroken envelope.** Everything a
      boilermaker
        builds defines an envelope that separates high-pressure inside from the people
        outside. Every weld, every tube, every nozzle is part of that envelope, and the
        envelope is only as good as its weakest joint. The mental question on every
        joint: is this part of the boundary, and does it hold.
      - **Stored energy waiting for a path.** A pressurized vessel holds energy
      like a
        compressed spring. The mental model on every repair is how much energy is in
        there and what happens if it finds a sudden path out — which is why a steam
        drum is treated with the respect owed to a bomb until it's proven empty and
        cold.
      - **The tube-to-tubesheet joint as an interference fit plus a seal.** The
      rolled
        tube grips the sheet by cold-working the metal into the tube hole; the seal weld
        (where required) backs it up. Rolling expands the tube wall into the sheet — too
        little leaves a leak, too much cracks the ligament between holes.
      - **Plate as a thing with memory and springback.** Rolling plate into a
      shell
        fights the steel's elasticity — it springs back, so it's over-rolled to land at
        the target radius. The fitter reads the curvature against a radius template and
        adjusts.
      - **The turnaround as a race against a clock that costs millions a day.**
      During
        an outage the unit is down and losing money every hour, so the work is sequenced
        to the critical path — but never at the cost of skipping a hold point or a test.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - A pressure vessel stores energy, and the only acceptable release of that
      energy
        is slow and controlled; every failure mode is a fast, uncontrolled release.
      - A weld on a pressure boundary is only as trustworthy as the procedure it
      was
        made to and the inspection that proved it.
      - Confined-space atmosphere can be lethal and invisible; you cannot judge
      air by
        looking at it, only by testing it.
      - The strength of a rolled tube joint is in controlled wall reduction, not
      in
        brute force.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - What code section governs this — Section I power boiler or Section VIII
        vessel — and what does that demand?
      - Is there a qualified WPS and PQR for this joint, and is the welder
      qualified on
        it?
      - Has this vessel been isolated, drained, vented, and proven dead before
      anyone
        goes inside?
      - Has the atmosphere been tested, is there an attendant, and is the
      lockout in
        place?
      - Is this shell course round and aligned, and is the nozzle prep clean
      before I
        let a welder touch it?
      - How much wall reduction does this tube roll need to seal without
      cracking the
        ligament?
      - What NDT does this joint require — RT, UT, MT, or PT — and where are the
      hold
        points?
      - Will it pass hydro, and is everyone clear of the line of fire if it
      doesn't?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Section I vs. Section VIII.** A fired power boiler making steam
      follows
        Section I; an unfired pressure vessel — a separator, an exchanger shell, a
        reactor — follows Section VIII. The choice sets the allowable stresses, the
        required NDT, and the stamp.
      - **Repair vs. replace under the National Board code.** A worn but sound
      vessel
        gets an R-stamp repair to NBIC rules; a vessel with cracked or thinned shell
        beyond repair limits gets a section replaced or is condemned. The decision turns
        on remaining wall, crack location, and code-allowed repair methods.
      - **Roll only, roll and seal-weld, or strength-weld the tube.** Roll-only
      for
        low-pressure where the joint sees little thermal cycling; roll plus seal weld
        for tightness in fouling or cycling service; full strength weld where the joint
        carries load. The service decides.
      - **NDT method by joint and defect of concern.** RT (radiography) and UT
        (ultrasonic) for volumetric defects in full-penetration welds; MT (magnetic
        particle) and PT (dye penetrant) for surface and near-surface cracks. Pick the
        method that finds the flaw that matters for that joint.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Read the drawings and the code requirements.** Establish the section,
         materials, weld procedures, NDT scope, and test pressure before any steel is
         cut.
      2. **Lay out and roll plate.** Mark and cut plate, roll it to the shell
      radius
         against a template, allowing for springback.
      3. **Fit up the shell and components.** Bring shell courses round and
      aligned, fit
         heads and nozzles, prep joints, and tack — handing the welder a true,
         code-conforming fit-up.
      4. **Weld to procedure.** Make code welds to the qualified WPS with
      qualified
         welders; roll and seal-weld tubes into tubesheets where the design calls for
         it.
      5. **Inspect.** Run the required NDT — RT, UT, MT, PT — and clear every
      defect to
         code before proceeding past the hold point.
      6. **Repair work: isolate and enter safely.** For in-service work,
      isolate, drain,
         vent, lock out, test the atmosphere, post an attendant, scaffold the drum
         interior, and only then enter the confined space.
      7. **Hydrotest and stamp.** Fill, pressurize to the code test pressure
      with
         everyone clear, hold and inspect, then apply the code stamp and document the
         work for the National Board.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Turnaround speed vs. code discipline.** Every hour the unit is down
      costs
        money, but skipping a hold point, a test, or an NDT to save time is how a vessel
        goes back in service with an undetected defect.
      - **Roll tightness vs. tubesheet integrity.** Rolling a tube harder makes
      a
        tighter seal but over-rolling cracks the ligament between tube holes — the
        judgment is in stopping at the right wall reduction.
      - **Repair vs. replace.** A repair is faster and cheaper now but a heavily
        degraded vessel patched repeatedly is a future failure; sometimes the
        responsible call is to condemn it.
      - **Shop fabrication vs. field erection.** Shop welds are controlled and
      easier to
        inspect, but a vessel too large to ship must be field-erected, trading
        inspection quality for transportability.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - If you can't prove the vessel is isolated, drained, and dead, you don't
      go
        inside — period.
      - Test the atmosphere before entry and keep testing; oxygen, then
      flammables, then
        toxics.
      - Over-roll the plate for springback — it will relax back toward flat.

      - A rolled tube wants a controlled wall reduction; chase the seal, not the
      torque.

      - Hydro with water, not air — compressed gas stores the energy that kills
      if the
        vessel lets go during the test.
      - Keep the line of fire clear during any pressure test; stand out of the
      path of a
        blown head or flange.
      - No qualified WPS, no weld on the pressure boundary.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **The unqualified weld on a pressure boundary.** A weld made without a
      backing
        procedure or by an unqualified welder — it may look fine and fail under
        pressure.
      - **Confined-space entry without atmosphere testing.** Oxygen-deficient or
      toxic
        air in a drum kills silently, and the would-be rescuer often becomes the second
        victim.
      - **Over-rolled tubes.** Excess expansion cracks the ligaments between
      tube holes
        in the tubesheet, ruining the sheet.
      - **Pneumatic test treated like a hydro.** Pressurizing with air or gas
      stores
        explosive energy; a failure during a pneumatic test is far more dangerous than
        during hydro.
      - **Skipped NDT at a turnaround.** A defect buried in a repair weld goes
      back in
        service undetected because the schedule won.
      - **Bad shell fit-up.** Out-of-round courses or misaligned seams force the
      welder
        to bridge gaps, building in defects.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **Entering a vessel "just for a minute"** without permit, lockout,
      atmosphere
        test, and an attendant.
      - **Welding the pressure boundary without a qualified WPS/PQR** to save
      time.

      - **Rolling tubes by feel alone past the proper wall reduction** and
      cracking the
        tubesheet.
      - **Air-testing a vessel because filling with water is inconvenient.**

      - **Patching a vessel past its repair limits** instead of condemning it.

      - **Letting the turnaround clock override a code hold point or a required
      test.**
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **ASME BPVC** — the Boiler & Pressure Vessel Code; Section I (power
      boilers),
        Section VIII (pressure vessels) are the boilermaker's governing sections.
      - **WPS / PQR** — Welding Procedure Specification and the Procedure
      Qualification
        Record that proves it; every code weld is made to a qualified WPS.
      - **R-stamp** — the National Board stamp authorizing repair and alteration
      of
        in-service pressure vessels.
      - **Tubesheet** — the perforated plate into which boiler or exchanger
      tubes are
        rolled and sealed.
      - **Tube rolling** — expanding a tube into its tubesheet hole by
      cold-working the
        wall to grip and seal.
      - **Shell course** — one rolled-and-welded ring of plate forming a section
      of a
        vessel's cylindrical body.
      - **NDT** — non-destructive testing: RT (radiographic), UT (ultrasonic),
      MT
        (magnetic particle), PT (dye penetrant).
      - **BLEVE** — boiling-liquid expanding-vapor explosion, the catastrophic
      failure
        of a vessel holding pressurized liquid above its boiling point.
      - **Turnaround / outage** — a scheduled shutdown during which boilers and
      vessels
        are opened, inspected, and repaired.
      - **Refractory** — the heat-resistant lining that protects boiler and
      furnace
        steel from the fire side.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      Plate rolls and the radius template for forming shell courses; tube
      expanders and

      roller motors with torque control for rolling tubes; tube pullers and
      cutters for

      removing failed tubes during a turnaround; rigging gear — chain falls,
      slings,

      spreader bars — for lifting heavy plate, drums, and vessel sections;
      grinders,

      bevel machines, and fit-up clamps and dogs for joint preparation;
      scaffolding and

      staging built inside drums and headers to reach the work; atmosphere
      monitors

      (oxygen, LEL, toxic gas) for confined-space entry, with the attendant's
      permit

      board and lockout locks; and the NDT toolkit handed to or coordinated with
      the

      inspector — RT film, UT probes, MT yokes, PT dye. The ASME code books and
      the

      qualified WPS package are as much a tool as the expander. Reading a
      vessel's

      condition — where it's thinned, where it's cracked, what's repairable —
      and

      sequencing a turnaround safely against the clock is what separates a
      journeyman

      from a parts-replacer.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      The boilermaker works alongside the welder — often is a qualified code
      welder —

      and hands the welder fit-ups that must conform to the procedure.
      Pipefitters tie

      their lines into the nozzles and headers the boilermaker builds, and the
      handoff

      is at the vessel boundary. Millwrights set the rotating equipment around
      the

      boiler; ironworkers erect the structural steel that carries the vessel's
      weight.

      The mechanical engineer specifies the design, the allowable stresses, and
      the

      code section, and the boilermaker flags where the field condition departs
      from

      the drawing. The authorized inspector — the AI — holds the stamp authority
      and

      the hold points, and the boilermaker's work lives or dies on passing the
      AI's NDT

      and hydro. During a turnaround the boilermaker is one trade in a tightly

      sequenced crowd, and the coordination friction is the confined space
      everyone

      wants into at once.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      A boilermaker builds things that can kill many people at once, and the
      failure is

      rarely the boilermaker's own — it lands on the operators and bystanders
      who trust

      that the stamp means the vessel is sound. The work is hidden the moment
      the vessel

      is closed and insulated, and the only proof of integrity is the procedure,
      the

      NDT, and the test. The duties: never make or accept a weld on a pressure
      boundary

      without a qualified procedure; never enter or send someone into a confined
      space

      without the permit, the lockout, the atmosphere test, and the attendant;
      never let

      the turnaround clock buy a skipped hold point or a skipped test; and never
      sign or

      stamp work that wouldn't survive an honest hydro. When a vessel is past
      safe

      repair, the ethical act is to say so, even when the customer wants it back
      in

      service. The code stamp is a promise made to people who will never see the
      weld.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **A boiler tube keeps failing at the same spot after a turnaround.**
      During an

      outage a superheater tube has thinned and leaked, and the crew is told to
      swap it

      fast because the unit is losing money down. The boilermaker isolates,
      drains, and

      vents the drum, tests the atmosphere, sets an attendant at the manway,
      locks out,

      and scaffolds inside before anyone enters. Pulling the failed tube, he
      sees the

      thinning is on the fire side — flame impingement, not a material defect,
      so a

      plain swap will fail again. He flags it for the engineer, replaces the
      tube to the

      qualified WPS, rolls and seal-welds it into the tubesheet at the correct
      wall

      reduction, and the root cause — a misdirected burner — gets corrected. He
      clears

      the NDT before the drum is closed and the hydro proves the joint. The
      schedule

      pressure never bought a shortcut on the entry or the test.


      **A pressure vessel needs an R-stamp repair to a cracked nozzle.** An
      in-service

      Section VIII separator develops a crack at a nozzle-to-shell weld, found
      on

      inspection. The temptation is to grind it out and weld it over. The
      boilermaker

      treats it as a code repair under the National Board: the vessel is
      depressurized,

      drained, and proven dead; the crack is excavated and confirmed by MT to be
      fully

      removed; the repair is welded to a qualified WPS by a qualified welder;
      and the

      weld is re-inspected by RT or UT and pressure-tested before the R-stamp
      and the

      documentation go to the National Board. The discipline is that the repair
      is

      traceable and proven, not just cosmetically closed, because the next
      operator's

      safety rests on it.


      **Deciding hydro vs. pneumatic test on a finished vessel.** A fabricated
      vessel

      is complete and the customer wants to skip filling it with water — it's
      awkward to

      drain on site — and pressure-test it with air instead. The boilermaker
      refuses the

      shortcut. Compressed air stores enormous energy; if a flaw the NDT missed
      lets go

      during the test, an air test turns the vessel into a fragmentation hazard,
      whereas

      water barely expands and the failure is a dribble. He insists on a
      hydrostatic

      test, fills the vessel, vents the air pockets so no gas is trapped, keeps
      everyone

      clear of the line of fire, pressurizes to the code test value, holds, and

      inspects. Only where a hydro is genuinely impossible does a pneumatic test
      happen,

      and then with the reduced pressures, exclusion zones, and precautions the
      code

      demands.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      The boilermaker is closest to the welder — many boilermakers are qualified
      code

      welders, and the trades overlap at the pressure-boundary weld. The
      pipefitter

      builds the piping that ties into the vessel's nozzles and headers, picking
      up

      where the boilermaker's envelope ends. The millwright sets the rotating
      equipment

      around the boiler, and the ironworker erects the structural steel that
      bears the

      vessel's weight. The mechanical engineer designs the vessel and specifies
      the

      code section and allowable stresses the boilermaker builds to, while the
      machinist

      makes the precision components — tube-sheet drilling, valve internals —
      the

      boilermaker assembles.
  - heading: References
    markdown: >-
      - *ASME Boiler & Pressure Vessel Code* — Section I (Power Boilers) and
      Section
        VIII (Pressure Vessels)
      - *National Board Inspection Code (NBIC)* — repairs and alterations,
      R-stamp

      - *ASME Section IX* — welding and brazing qualifications (WPS/PQR)

      - *The Boilermaker's Handbook*

      - Boilermakers (IBB) apprenticeship curriculum
