Is 3500 lb/in Referring to Force per Inch of Width?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the interpretation of a failure load of 3500 lb/in for a composite piece made of CFRP. The user seeks clarification on whether this value refers to the force that can be applied per inch of width, suggesting that a wider piece would proportionally increase the failure load. Participants indicate that the 3500 lb/in figure may pertain to a single ply of CFRP rather than the entire 12-ply structure. Without additional details about the material properties and the spreadsheet's calculations, definitive conclusions cannot be drawn. The conversation emphasizes the need for a complete understanding of the material and testing parameters to accurately assess the failure load.
Corsan
Messages
13
Reaction score
0
Hi all,
I have a spreadsheet which says failure will occur in my composite piece when a load of 3500 lb/in is applied.
If I were to tensile test this piece and the thickness has already been input (0.138 in) does this mean for every inch wide the piece can take 3500lb of force?
That seems high?

I'm confused about the units of measurement and if someone can clarify this I'd appreciate it,
Regards
 
Physics news on Phys.org
This is impossible to answer the general question without a complete description of what you are calculating.

For the particular number you got, it's impossible to say whether 3500 lbf is a sensible load to apply over a 1 x 0.138 inch area unless you tell us what material the test piece is made from.
 
AlephZero said:
This is impossible to answer the general question without a complete description of what you are calculating.

For the particular number you got, it's impossible to say whether 3500 lbf is a sensible load to apply over a 1 x 0.138 inch area unless you tell us what material the test piece is made from.

Ah right okay, its a 10" x 1" x 0.138" thick piece of CFRP (12 plies).

I'm planning on tensile testing unti failure and a spreadhseet I have from the internet says the failure load is 3500 lb/in but nowhere on this does it state the width/length of the piece so its obviously working it out from the ply properties (E1,E2...etc).

What I'm asking is, if that is the 'failure load' then does that mean that for every 1" width that the plies can take 3500 lb/in force?
 
I would have thought a 1 x 0.138 section of CFRP would take a lot more than that 3500lb. Even mild steel would do that.

Possibly your "3500 lb/in" is for one ply of CFRP, not for 12 ... ?
 
AlephZero said:
I would have thought a 1 x 0.138 section of CFRP would take a lot more than that 3500lb. Even mild steel would do that.

Possibly your "3500 lb/in" is for one ply of CFRP, not for 12 ... ?

Okay, I'll keep that in mind during the test.

Am I right in what I say though?
i.e. the 3500 lb/in refers to the width of the cross section, so if it were 2 inches wide the predicted failure would be 7000 lb/in?

Regards
 
Corsan said:
Am I right in what I say though?
i.e. the 3500 lb/in refers to the width of the cross section, so if it were 2 inches wide the predicted failure would be 7000 lb/in?

That seems a reasonable guess, but without seeing the complete spreadsheet (or at least the relevant equations) and understanding how it works, it is only a guess and I don't accept any responsibility if it turns out to be wrong!
 
Thread 'Is there a white hole inside every black hole?'
This is what I am thinking. How much feasible is it? There is a white hole inside every black hole The white hole spits mass/energy out continuously The mass/energy that is spit out of a white hole drops back into it eventually. This is because of extreme space time curvature around the white hole Ironically this extreme space time curvature of the space around a white hole is caused by the huge mass/energy packed in the white hole Because of continuously spitting mass/energy which keeps...
Why do two separately floating objects in a liquid "attract" each other ?? What if gravity is an emergent property like surface tension ? What if they both are essentially trying to *minimize disorder at the interfaces — where non-aligned polarized particles are forced to mix with each other* What if gravity is an emergent property that is trying to optimize the entropy emerging out of spin aligned quantum bits

Similar threads

Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
5
Views
12K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
5
Views
6K
Replies
1
Views
4K
Replies
1
Views
2K
Back
Top