MTR compliance for structural fabrication, erection, and inspection.
Steel fabricators, erectors, and special inspectors working to AISC, AWS D1.1, and IBC requirements. Material traceability from mill certificate to bolt-up.
The problems MTR.AI solves for structural steel.
Every industry has its own set of specification complexity, regulatory pressure, and documentation volume. These are the challenges we hear from quality engineers in your sector.
Seismic demand-critical requirements
AISC 341 and AWS D1.8 impose supplementary CVN, chemistry, and maximum yield requirements for demand-critical welds. Standard MTR review processes often miss these supplementary checks.
Mixed domestic and import material
Buy America and AISC Charter requirements mandate domestic melt and manufacture. MTRs from international mills must be flagged, and country-of-origin documentation must be verified alongside chemistry and mechanicals.
High-volume repetitive shapes
Structural projects consume hundreds of wide-flange beams, HSS, and plate. Each heat number needs verification, but the sheer volume makes manual review impractical without a systematic process.
Special inspection documentation
IBC Section 1705 requires special inspection of structural steel, including material verification. Inspectors need fast access to verified MTRs tied to specific members and connections.
Standards built into the verification engine.
MTR.AI's specification engine includes the full requirements tables for these standards — chemical composition limits, mechanical property minimums, supplementary requirements, and heat treatment conditions. Not a lookup table. The actual acceptance criteria, encoded and version-tracked.
Request early access for structural steel
We're onboarding early partners across structural steel. If your team reviews MTRs against ASTM A992 or ASTM A572, let's talk.