New York Paper - Shock Tests of Cast Steel (with Discussion)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 40
- File Size:
- 2454 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1914
Abstract
The Frémont test for measuring the energy consumed in breaking a notched bar of steel is not so well known in this country as it deserves to be. The test specimen used in this test is about # by 6 by about 16 in., notched with a hack saw on the lower side to cause the piece to break at a fixed point. A weight of 10 kg. falling 4 m., and provided with a knife or chisel which strikes the specimen, breaks the test piece by impact. The residual force in the falling weight after it has broken the specimen is recorded by a suitable device, and the difference between the total energy and the residual energy of the weight (in kilogrammeters) is the force consumed in breaking the specimen. An experience of several years with the Frémont testing machine has shown its great value in readily detecting brittleness not revealed by tensile testing or slow bending testing. In this paper it is proposed to discuss (1) the supersensitiveness of the test as applied to cast steel and (2) its value in revealing the effect of heat treatment under certain conditions. In testing coupons cut from castings heat treated by quenching and annealing, attention was drawn to the wide variations in the value of the Frémont test of specimens cut from different parts of the coupon. The latter was of the form and dimensions shown in Fig. 1, and Fremont test pieces were cut from two parts of this coupon, marked A and B in that figure. The results of the tests are shown below, tests A and B in each instance being from the same coupon: A. B. A. B. Coupon. Kilogram- Kilogram- Coupon. Kilogram- Kilogram- meters. meters. meters. meters. 1,........ 12.0 12.5 9,........ 27.5 32.5 2,........ 11.0 32.5 10,........17.5 31.0 3,........ 11.5 30.0 11,........ 14.5 31.0 4,........ 20.0 33.0 12,........ 15.0 27.5 5,........ 17.5 33.0 13,........ 19.0 30.0 6,........ 17.5 20.0 14,........ 17.5 25.5 7,........ 17.5 13.0 15,........15.0 30.0 8,........ 10.0 30.0
Citation
APA:
(1914) New York Paper - Shock Tests of Cast Steel (with Discussion)MLA: New York Paper - Shock Tests of Cast Steel (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1914.