Hyrax
Mechanical
- Dec 4, 2009
- 4
My work in a metallurgy department is having me look into ultimate stresses of different alloys under different testing methods.
I have cylindrical 1018 steel samples. Why is it that when performing a tensile test on it, the ultimate stress is lower than the ultimate stress when testing the same material in a 3 point bending test? The ultimate bending strength is about 2x the tested tensile stress.
I am pretty sure it has to do with load orientation or grain boundaries, but I can't find anything to cite that. Does anyone here have a book or preferably online source I can be referred to that would explain why the ultimate stress in a tensile test is different from a bending, shear, or torsion test?
Thanks!
I have cylindrical 1018 steel samples. Why is it that when performing a tensile test on it, the ultimate stress is lower than the ultimate stress when testing the same material in a 3 point bending test? The ultimate bending strength is about 2x the tested tensile stress.
I am pretty sure it has to do with load orientation or grain boundaries, but I can't find anything to cite that. Does anyone here have a book or preferably online source I can be referred to that would explain why the ultimate stress in a tensile test is different from a bending, shear, or torsion test?
Thanks!