nickc88
Mechanical
- Jan 9, 2012
- 2
Hi all,
I have been doing a little bit of lab work lately as part of a screening / QA process for some of our products. Part of this includes short beam shear testing. I have a couple of questions and if anyone has any useful tips / observations from experience they would be much appreciated!
I'm working to ASTM D2344M.
1. I have been using this to calculate the ILSS (from the standard)
ILSS = 0.75 x P / (bxh) with P being the force obtained from
testing.
I could be wrong but wracking my brains back to mechanics of materials... is the max shear stress in a rectangular beam not given by 3P/2A? with this maximum being the peak of a parabolic distribution 0 at the top and bottom??? If this is the case, why does the standard specify 0.75 P/A?
2. The load / extension plots of most of the samples I test go in a somewhat linear fashion followed by a large drop in load. The graph ends up looking like a big tick.
Some however do not have such a nice failure. They might drop load slightly but not enough to trigger the 30% load drop failure critera. Some just gradually level out.
-Do samples that do not produce a "tick like" result mean that the sample is not failing in interlamina shear?
-Is it possible to infer an ILSS from a sample that did not have a clean failure?
3. Does anyone have any experience doing ILSS testing on filament wound tubes?
Thanks very much
I have been doing a little bit of lab work lately as part of a screening / QA process for some of our products. Part of this includes short beam shear testing. I have a couple of questions and if anyone has any useful tips / observations from experience they would be much appreciated!
I'm working to ASTM D2344M.
1. I have been using this to calculate the ILSS (from the standard)
ILSS = 0.75 x P / (bxh) with P being the force obtained from
testing.
I could be wrong but wracking my brains back to mechanics of materials... is the max shear stress in a rectangular beam not given by 3P/2A? with this maximum being the peak of a parabolic distribution 0 at the top and bottom??? If this is the case, why does the standard specify 0.75 P/A?
2. The load / extension plots of most of the samples I test go in a somewhat linear fashion followed by a large drop in load. The graph ends up looking like a big tick.
Some however do not have such a nice failure. They might drop load slightly but not enough to trigger the 30% load drop failure critera. Some just gradually level out.
-Do samples that do not produce a "tick like" result mean that the sample is not failing in interlamina shear?
-Is it possible to infer an ILSS from a sample that did not have a clean failure?
3. Does anyone have any experience doing ILSS testing on filament wound tubes?
Thanks very much