Cmmuell..
Thanks for link to the report "Uniaxial and Biaxial Tests on Riveted Fuselage Lap Joint Specimens".
As a designer and M&P guy, I was unnerved by the comparison of apples and oranges... and the conclusion that apples would be inferior since they had a thin skin and would be easy to puncture. There were so many discrepancies and inconsistencies in this test program that I shudder to think it was technically acceptable to the FAA.
A few examples.
Dimpled configuration was arbritrarily accepted as a 2-row staggered splice... whereas the NAS 1097 joint was as 3-rwo staggered and in-line layout.
ALODINE [Chem Film] is the surface prep of choice for thin sheet metal. ANODIZE as used is NON-STANDARD for thin sheet metal. By definition, anodize, even very thin anodize is a known surface embrittling agent. also it was unclear as to when the anodize and primer were applied... IE: before fabrication or after fabrication [IE: before or after dimpling and/or countersinking].
How were the dimples made? Hand or machine, cold or hot?? single or "ganged"?? Undersized pilot hole drilled thru to final ID then riveted?? US or nominal diameter pilot hole dimpled then riveted?? extra long rivets over-driven in sloppy holes?? Post dimpling visual inspection [or better yet, penetrant NDI]??
The 0.2-mm [0.008-inch] foil was a mystery... First: Unbonded joints SHOULD have intimate metal-metal-fayiing contact [tight pull-up] such that primer-contacts-primer... or a mirco-thin coating of sealant [0.002 max] for joint sealing and moisture exclusion. Effectively they tested a poorly assembled joint with shanked rivets [aluminum foil in between sheets won't resist/support rivet shanks, alowing the rivet to shank... wheras high strength epoxies tend to minimize the shanking effect and stabilize the sheets.
Which leads me to the last statement I will make here [because I simply have to get-off line and do some work...]: the test did NOT reference ANY established [standard] material or fabrication procedures so that basic "how/what-did-they..." questions could be resolved. Example: hole, countersink and dimple dimensions and quality standards. Specimen fabrication standards. What was the material spec for the 2024-T3 clad aluminum alloy, IE: AMS-QQ-A-250/5, AMS4041 or prEN2090??? ETC....
Regards, Wil Taylor