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tolerance
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Book Chapter
Series: ASM Technical Books
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 November 2012
DOI: 10.31399/asm.tb.ffub.t53610303
EISBN: 978-1-62708-303-4
... control plans optimized for different circumstances, examines the damage tolerance requirements used by different industries, and discusses various approaches for fatigue design. damage tolerance analysis fracture control proof testing FRACTURE CONTROL is the concerted effort to ensure safe...
Abstract
Fracture control can be defined as a concerted effort to maintain operating safety without catastrophic failure by fracture. It requires an understanding of how cracks affect structural integrity and strength and the time that a crack can grow before it exceeds permissible size. The chapter describes some of methods used to determine maximum permissible crack size and predict growth rates. It explains how the information can then be used to control fractures through periodic inspection, fail-safe features, mandated retirement, and proof testing. It presents a number of fracture control plans optimized for different circumstances, examines the damage tolerance requirements used by different industries, and discusses various approaches for fatigue design.
Book Chapter
Series: ASM Technical Books
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 August 2005
DOI: 10.31399/asm.tb.mmfi.t69540215
EISBN: 978-1-62708-309-6
... Abstract This chapter presents a fracture-mechanics-based approach to damage tolerance, accounting for mechanical, metallurgical, and environmental factors that drive crack development and growth. It begins with a review of stress-intensity factors corresponding to a wide range of crack...
Abstract
This chapter presents a fracture-mechanics-based approach to damage tolerance, accounting for mechanical, metallurgical, and environmental factors that drive crack development and growth. It begins with a review of stress-intensity factors corresponding to a wide range of crack geometries, specimen configurations, and loading conditions. The discussion covers two- and three-dimensional cracks as well as the use of correction factors and problem-simplification techniques for dealing with nonstandard configurations. The chapter goes on to describe how fatigue loading affects crack growth rates in each of the three stages of progression. Using images, diagrams, and data plots, it reveals how cracks advance in step with successive stress cycles and explains how fatigue crack growth rates can be determined by examining striations on fracture specimens and correlating their widths with stress profiles. It also describes how material-related factors, load history, corrosion, and temperature affect crack growth rates, and discusses the steps involved in life assessment.
Book Chapter
Series: ASM Technical Books
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 December 1995
DOI: 10.31399/asm.tb.sch6.t68200206
EISBN: 978-1-62708-354-6
... Abstract Users of steel castings establish performance requirements for specific characteristics of the castings based on the planned use. They express tolerance for variation in those characteristics to the producer of the castings. One issue which should never be taken for granted...
Abstract
Users of steel castings establish performance requirements for specific characteristics of the castings based on the planned use. They express tolerance for variation in those characteristics to the producer of the castings. One issue which should never be taken for granted in considering capability and tolerances is the ability to measure with accuracy and precision (repeatability and reproducibility). This chapter discusses the methods for measuring accuracy and precision. It describes the variation of process characteristics, capability indices in general use, and factors related to process performance and tolerance specification.
Image
Published: 01 July 1997
Fig. 26 Stress-corrosion cracking (SCC) defect tolerance parameter vs. hardness for carbon steel weldments in three environments. Data are derived from published tests on pre-cracked specimens of various types of carbon steel base metals, heat-affected zones, and weld metals. SCC defect
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Published: 01 December 2009
Fig. 10.2 ±1% resistors. After sorting, the distribution at this tight tolerance appears to be nearly uniform.
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Published: 01 December 2009
Fig. 15.1 Tolerance analysis and x-ray images. A mechanism designer and manufacturer experienced pin jamming in one of its products. A fault-tree analysis hypothesized the existence of an interference fit. The tolerance analysis drawing on the left showed that this could occur under certain
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Published: 01 June 2016
Fig. 1.12 Early cold spray repair of a Sandia satellite housing. Out-of-tolerance surface was built up with cold spray and then remachined to meet specifications. This is believed to be the first cold-sprayed part to be launched into space. Courtesy of Sandia National Laboratories
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Published: 01 October 2011
Fig. 6.4 Approximate values of surface roughness and tolerance on dimensions typically obtained with different manufacturing processes. Polymers are different from metals and ceramics in that they can be processed to a very high surface smoothness, but tight tolerances are seldom possible
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Published: 01 February 2005
Fig. 1.2 Surface finish and tolerance range for various manufacturing processes. [ Schey et al., 2000 ]
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Published: 01 November 2013
Fig. 2 Dimensional tolerance achievable through various machining operations under general machining conditions as a function of feature size. Source: Ref 1
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Published: 01 November 2010
Fig. 1.16 Compared with aluminum alloy sheet, a composite laminate has poor tolerance of stress concentration because of its brittle nature. Source: Ref 3
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Published: 01 November 2010
Fig. 14.20 Use of stitching to improve damage tolerance. Source: Ref 18
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in Fatigue and Fracture of Continuous-Fiber Polymer-Matrix Composites
> Fatigue and Fracture: Understanding the Basics
Published: 01 November 2012
Fig. 30 Use of stitching to improve damage tolerance. Source: Ref 16
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Published: 01 October 2012
Fig. 12.5 Approximate values of surface roughness and tolerance on dimensions typically obtained with different manufacturing processes. ECM, electrochemical machining; EDM, electrical discharge machining. Source: Ref 12.7
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Published: 01 July 2009
Fig. 20.16 Forgeability tolerance found by compressing solid cylinders of high-strength beryllium at various temperatures to various reductions in height. The compression yield strength of samples taken from the resulting forgings is listed near each data point in units of MPa. Source: Floyd
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Published: 01 December 2015
Fig. 2 Stress-corrosion cracking (SCC) defect tolerance parameter ( K ISCC /σ y ), where K ISCC is the threshold SCC intensity factor and σ y is yield stress versus hardness for carbon steel weldments in three environments. Data are derived from published tests on precracked specimens
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Published: 01 December 2015
Fig. 12 The H 2 S-pH tolerance of low-carbon martensitic stainless steel tested by the slow strain-rate technique. HAC, hydrogen-assisted cracking. Source: Ref 25
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Published: 31 March 2024
Fig. 1.27 Lead tolerances for crowned teeth. (a) Crown tolerance only. (b) Total tolerance band crown lead
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Published: 01 October 2012
Fig. 2.10 Types of aluminum closed-die forgings and tolerances for each. (a) Blocker type. (b) Conventional. (c) High definition. (d) Precision. Source: Ref 2.12 Characteristic Tolerance, mm (in.) Blocker-type Conventional High-definition Precision Die closure +2.3, –1.5
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