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the testing machine divided by the
original cross-sectional area of the specimen. The force registered at the instant
of breakage, divided by the final cross-section
area of the specimen at the point of breakage, is termed the fracture
strength. In
steel, fracture strength, while of little practical significance, almost always
has a higher value than ultimate tensile
strength. Permanent deformation of steel increases its unit tensile strength.
Thats why steel wire, which is repeatedly
deformed as it is drawn, is stronger (in terms of breaking force per unit of cross-section)
than a steel bar from
the same heat of steel, and why cold-rolled steel is stronger than hot-rolled
steel. Lets
now try to define more precisely the several terms just introduced in describing
the tensile testing of a steel bar:
Fig. 8-2. Tensile strength of a weld
coupon can be determined by
pulling the coupon until it breaks.
Fig. 8-3. This coupon has started to
neck down outside the weld
zone. The weld
is good.
Hard-
Surfacing,
Building
Fusion
Welding
Carbon
Welding
Non-Ferrous
Metals
Heating
& Heat
Treating
Braze
Welding
Welding
Cast Iron
Welding
Ferrous
Metals
Brazing
&
Soldering
Equipment
Set-Up
Operation
Equipment
For
OXY-Acet
Structure
of
Steel
Mechanical
Properties
of Metals
Oxygen
&
Acetylene
OXY-Acet
Flame
Physical
Properties
of Metals
How Steels
Are
Classified
Expansion
&
Contraction
Prep
For
Welding
OXY-Acet
Welding
& Cutting
Safety
Practices
Manual
Cutting
Oxygen
Cutting By
Machine
Appendices
Testing
&
Inspecting