When the email finally arrives, it contains a simple PDF. No fanfare. No confetti. Just a table:
One senior examiner, speaking anonymously, told this writer: “I’ve seen inspectors find every single defect perfectly, then fail because they recorded the wrong standard reference. They wrote ‘ISO 5817 Level B’ when the test was ‘AWS D1.1.’ That’s not inspection—that’s administration. But the result doesn’t care.” Module 3 is the dark horse. Photographs of cross-sectioned welds (macros) are static, two-dimensional, and unforgiving. A lack of fusion deep in a root pass that might be ambiguous in real life is starkly clear in a macro. But so are artifacts—grinding marks, oxidation, or poor etching. cswip 3.1 exam result
Wait 48 hours before booking a resit. Use that time to analyze your score report. Did you fail by a wide margin in one module? You need a full retraining course. Did you fail by 1-2% in one module? You need 10 hours of focused practice with real coupons, not more theory. Do not simply repeat the same preparation. The definition of insanity applies to welding inspection. When the email finally arrives, it contains a simple PDF
There is also a small but persistent group of “serial resitters”—candidates who fail the same module three or more times. The majority are experienced welders who simply cannot adapt to exam conditions. They know, in their bones, that a 0.8mm undercut is fine on a structural beam in the field. The exam demands they reject it. That cognitive dissonance is expensive. A CSWIP 3.1 certificate does not make someone a great inspector. It makes them a certified inspector. The distinction matters. Just a table: One senior examiner, speaking anonymously,