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The Hardness Test as a Means of Estimating the Tensile Strength of Metals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2016

Extract

When J. A. Brinell, at the end of the last century, interested himself in the property hardness of metals, he could have had no idea of the importance to be attained later by the new line of investigation he was launching nor of the interesting machines and their applications for which his work was to provide the inspiration.

In the aircraft industry this form of test is not solely used to determine the property hardness as such, but is used to give some idea of the maximum tensile strength of the material. This use is illustrated by some of the specifications controlling the quality of aircraft material, in which hardness tests are required on a specified percentage of bars to ensure that the bars which are riot tensile tested will give a maximum tensile strength of not less than the minimum nor greater than the maximum specification values.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society 1942

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References

1. The effects of variation in diamond indentors used in the Vickers Hardness Testing Machine. Fuller, F. B. Trans, of the American Society for Metals, Vol. XXV, No. 4.Google Scholar
2. The hardness of metals and its measurement. Hugh O'NeilGoogle Scholar