Koz
Structural
- Apr 3, 2000
- 48
Hi Guys,
I'm really bugged by this CVN thing. Acknowledging ASTM Standard E23, A6, and A992 for wide-flange "I" beams and we all run these tests correctly with all of the properly calibrated instrumentation. Oh yes, and the chemistry variations ie product versus ladle have been understood for decades. And in the mild steel business we like 20 ft-lbs @ -40 deg F as being "tough".
The location of the coupon plays such an important part in the data gathered and the engineering decisions that are made! I have records of tests on wide-flanges that show CVN variation from from 222 ft-lbs @ 70 deg F at the flanges (ASTM A6 standard location), 60 ft-lbs @ 70 deg F at the web, and 3 ft-lbs @ 70 deg F at the "K" region intersecting the web to flange. These are not of the same heat of material, but all of these wide-flanges were mill produced, taken from fabricated products, and meet all ASTM requirements. I believe similar values would be encountered in any single wide-flange section produced today. A992 is not that different from A572 GR 50 and indeed A36 wide-flange shapes are triple certified to these standards.
And how do these values work in the Barsom-Rolfe fracture toughness equations in AASHTO and BS7910? For the flanges, I get a Kmat of 280 ksi rtin and the "k" region 19!!
Also, how can the E23 standard 10mm x 10mm coupon accomodate the increased restraint at the "k" region. Aren't we getting into a plane-strain condition? Once we machine away the restraint, we should have nice ductile material again, right? This is similar to thick-to-thin regions in castings or forgings.
Please fill me in, because I am having a hard time with CVN and its application in an engineering sense. 100 deg in Miami is a lot different than 100 deg here in Utah. I will appreciate any input.
Koz
I'm really bugged by this CVN thing. Acknowledging ASTM Standard E23, A6, and A992 for wide-flange "I" beams and we all run these tests correctly with all of the properly calibrated instrumentation. Oh yes, and the chemistry variations ie product versus ladle have been understood for decades. And in the mild steel business we like 20 ft-lbs @ -40 deg F as being "tough".
The location of the coupon plays such an important part in the data gathered and the engineering decisions that are made! I have records of tests on wide-flanges that show CVN variation from from 222 ft-lbs @ 70 deg F at the flanges (ASTM A6 standard location), 60 ft-lbs @ 70 deg F at the web, and 3 ft-lbs @ 70 deg F at the "K" region intersecting the web to flange. These are not of the same heat of material, but all of these wide-flanges were mill produced, taken from fabricated products, and meet all ASTM requirements. I believe similar values would be encountered in any single wide-flange section produced today. A992 is not that different from A572 GR 50 and indeed A36 wide-flange shapes are triple certified to these standards.
And how do these values work in the Barsom-Rolfe fracture toughness equations in AASHTO and BS7910? For the flanges, I get a Kmat of 280 ksi rtin and the "k" region 19!!
Also, how can the E23 standard 10mm x 10mm coupon accomodate the increased restraint at the "k" region. Aren't we getting into a plane-strain condition? Once we machine away the restraint, we should have nice ductile material again, right? This is similar to thick-to-thin regions in castings or forgings.
Please fill me in, because I am having a hard time with CVN and its application in an engineering sense. 100 deg in Miami is a lot different than 100 deg here in Utah. I will appreciate any input.
Koz