A steel pipe is a type of steel with a hollow cross-section and a length much greater than its diameter or circumference
Steel pipes come in various shapes.





Steel pipes can be divided into seamless steel pipes and welded steel pipes according to their production methods. The two have significant differences in production processes, performance characteristics, and application scenarios.
Production scene of seamless steel pipe Production scene of welded steel pipe
Production process
|
category |
Core production processes |
Process characteristics |
|
seamless steel pipe |
Solid tube billets (steel ingots or round steel) are used as raw materials. After heating, they are pierced into hollow tubes through a piercing machine, and then rolled into hollow tubes of the required size through hot rolling, cold rolling or extrusion processes. There are no welding seams in the whole process. |
The process is complicated and requires multiple steps such as perforation and pipe rolling. It has high requirements on equipment and technology, and the production efficiency is relatively low. |
|
Welded steel pipe |
Steel plates or strips are used as raw materials. After being rolled and formed, the joints are connected into a tubular shape by welding (resistance welding, arc welding, etc.), and there are obvious welds. |
The process is relatively simple, and welding is carried out directly after forming, which has high production efficiency and low equipment investment, making it suitable for large-scale production. |
Performance characteristics comparison
|
Performance indicators |
seamless steel pipe |
Welded steel pipe |
|
Strength and pressure resistance |
There are no welds on the whole body, the force is evenly distributed, and it has excellent pressure resistance and explosion resistance. It can withstand high pressure (for example, the pressure resistance of ultra-high pressure boiler tubes can reach tens of MPa). |
The weld is a weak link, with strength slightly lower than that of the parent material and poor pressure resistance. It is usually suitable for low-pressure scenarios (such as ordinary water and gas transmission). |
|
Toughness and fatigue resistance |
The material is uniform, has good toughness, and has strong fatigue resistance under vibration and impact environments, making it suitable for dynamic load scenarios (such as mechanical transmission shafts). |
The weld may have defects such as inclusions and pores, and is prone to cracking under long-term vibration or cyclic stress, and has weak fatigue resistance. |
|
Toughness and fatigue resistance |
Cold rolling or cold drawing process can achieve high precision size (such as wall thickness deviation ≤ 0.1mm) and high surface finish. |
There may be slight deformation after welding, low dimensional accuracy, and surface finish depends on the raw materials and welding process. |
|
Corrosion resistance |
The material is uniform and there are no weld defects. If corrosion-resistant materials (such as stainless steel) are used, the overall corrosion resistance will be more stable. |
Welds are prone to corrosion due to oxidation and stress concentration and require additional treatment (such as galvanizing and anti-corrosion coating). |
Application Scenario Comparison
|
Typical applications of seamless steel pipes |
Typical applications of welded steel pipes |
|
High-pressure fluid transportation (such as oil and natural gas high-pressure pipelines) |
Low-pressure fluid transportation (such as tap water and sewage pipes) |
|
High temperature and high pressure equipment (such as boiler superheaters, nuclear power plant pipelines) |
Building structures (such as scaffolding, guardrails) |
|
Mechanical parts (such as automobile drive shafts, hydraulic cylinders) |
Low-pressure gas transmission and ventilation ducts |
|
High-pressure pipelines in precision instruments and medical devices |
Agricultural irrigation, municipal drainage pipes |
Summary
Both have their advantages and disadvantages, and the choice should be made based on a comprehensive assessment of the specific operating conditions (pressure, temperature, media), cost budget, and performance requirements.

