ACtrafficengr
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 5, 2002
- 1,641
I hope you good folks won't mind educating this civil guy. My day job is usually spent keeping your products from crashing into things or each other, so I haven't been keeping up with materials.
In a recent car review ( they say that a manufacturer is using high-strength steel to increase the structural stiffness of a new model without increasing weight. My recollection is E changes little from alloy to alloy. Has there been a breakthrough in this department, or are do the new steels allow more shape manipulation to increase stiffness that way?
"...students of traffic are beginning to realize the false economy of mechanically controlled traffic, and hand work by trained officers will again prevail." - Wm. Phelps Eno, ca. 1928
"I'm searching for the questions, so my answers will make sense." - Stephen Brust
In a recent car review ( they say that a manufacturer is using high-strength steel to increase the structural stiffness of a new model without increasing weight. My recollection is E changes little from alloy to alloy. Has there been a breakthrough in this department, or are do the new steels allow more shape manipulation to increase stiffness that way?
"...students of traffic are beginning to realize the false economy of mechanically controlled traffic, and hand work by trained officers will again prevail." - Wm. Phelps Eno, ca. 1928
"I'm searching for the questions, so my answers will make sense." - Stephen Brust