EngineerTex
Mechanical
- Apr 17, 2008
- 368
I have been conflicted for years on the subject of need for Charpy tests on raw material used in structural applications. On one hand:
1) It's required per codes and customers.
2) I can't deny the fact that the ductile-brittle transition exists.
3) In critical applications, I would rather be safe than sorry.
4) It can't be denied that Charpy testing does give an indirect test of mill/forge/foundry manufacturing quality.
On the other hand:
1) Bridges built in the 1920's & 1930's are still standing today. Charpy testing was probably never done on any of this structural steel.
2) Cars and trucks drive around Winnipeg all winter and I've not heard of frames, wheels, axles, doors and other steel members that have been manufactured by the millions shattering or breaking without bending. Do cars hit potholes in the winter and break axles or spindles? Do trucks run into cars in winter and have their bumpers break in half? Does the frame break in half? I've never heard of that, so I don't think it happens. Maybe I'm just in the dark about things and I can be corrected.
3) In the Siberian oil fields, I highly doubt that there is great attention paid to impact toughness of mill-rolled components comprising their derricks and service equipment.
4) I-beams, plates, pipes, tubular members, grating, expanded metal comprises all of the equipment my industry has used for decades. I *KNOW* it has not had any level of Charpy testing and I doubt the material would pass any testing if it did. This very old equipment is rigged up and down in -35F to -45F temperatures and used in daily service in those conditions. Some components are hardened alloys with carburized surfaces being used to ram against other steel elements. Others are mild steel which experience certain impact loads, while others are low alloys with various types of heat treatment. The materials run the spectrum of low to high quality and I have never seen or heard of the slightest problem in regards to this subject.
So all that said, I would be interested in:
1) Published papers on the ACTUAL need for fracture toughness on low-temperature structural applications.
2) Regarding components of structures such as radio towers, power transmission towers, above-water cold-weather marine equipment: How does one differentiate between parts which are exposed directly to an impact and those components that are indirectly loaded, i.e., if component A (a pipe, for example) is struck, but component B (an I-beam, perhaps) supports component A, are they both considered as having experienced an impact load? Or is only component A considered as such?
3) (Most importantly) Case studies of structural failure attributed to low-temperature brittle failures.
I've searched on the forums here and not found a great deal on exactly this subject. So any help is appreciated. If there are insightful books or papers anyone can refer me to, I'll gladly pay for them.
My big problem is that it is as if people regard low-temperature brittle fracture as some sort of mystic prophecy that is only known to the ancients, while the mortals who fill the ranks of regulators and customers see Charpy testing as a type of talisman that wards off the evil spirits. Call me a heretic, but I think that those who require extensive Charpy testing usually don't know what they're talking about.
Engineering is not the science behind building. It is the science behind not building.
1) It's required per codes and customers.
2) I can't deny the fact that the ductile-brittle transition exists.
3) In critical applications, I would rather be safe than sorry.
4) It can't be denied that Charpy testing does give an indirect test of mill/forge/foundry manufacturing quality.
On the other hand:
1) Bridges built in the 1920's & 1930's are still standing today. Charpy testing was probably never done on any of this structural steel.
2) Cars and trucks drive around Winnipeg all winter and I've not heard of frames, wheels, axles, doors and other steel members that have been manufactured by the millions shattering or breaking without bending. Do cars hit potholes in the winter and break axles or spindles? Do trucks run into cars in winter and have their bumpers break in half? Does the frame break in half? I've never heard of that, so I don't think it happens. Maybe I'm just in the dark about things and I can be corrected.
3) In the Siberian oil fields, I highly doubt that there is great attention paid to impact toughness of mill-rolled components comprising their derricks and service equipment.
4) I-beams, plates, pipes, tubular members, grating, expanded metal comprises all of the equipment my industry has used for decades. I *KNOW* it has not had any level of Charpy testing and I doubt the material would pass any testing if it did. This very old equipment is rigged up and down in -35F to -45F temperatures and used in daily service in those conditions. Some components are hardened alloys with carburized surfaces being used to ram against other steel elements. Others are mild steel which experience certain impact loads, while others are low alloys with various types of heat treatment. The materials run the spectrum of low to high quality and I have never seen or heard of the slightest problem in regards to this subject.
So all that said, I would be interested in:
1) Published papers on the ACTUAL need for fracture toughness on low-temperature structural applications.
2) Regarding components of structures such as radio towers, power transmission towers, above-water cold-weather marine equipment: How does one differentiate between parts which are exposed directly to an impact and those components that are indirectly loaded, i.e., if component A (a pipe, for example) is struck, but component B (an I-beam, perhaps) supports component A, are they both considered as having experienced an impact load? Or is only component A considered as such?
3) (Most importantly) Case studies of structural failure attributed to low-temperature brittle failures.
I've searched on the forums here and not found a great deal on exactly this subject. So any help is appreciated. If there are insightful books or papers anyone can refer me to, I'll gladly pay for them.
My big problem is that it is as if people regard low-temperature brittle fracture as some sort of mystic prophecy that is only known to the ancients, while the mortals who fill the ranks of regulators and customers see Charpy testing as a type of talisman that wards off the evil spirits. Call me a heretic, but I think that those who require extensive Charpy testing usually don't know what they're talking about.
Engineering is not the science behind building. It is the science behind not building.