Jul 9, 2004 #1 adela Civil/Environmental Joined Jul 9, 2004 Messages 3 Location US Can anybody tell me where to find the S-N curves for steel. I really need the experimental data of one type of steel.
Can anybody tell me where to find the S-N curves for steel. I really need the experimental data of one type of steel.
Jul 9, 2004 #2 boo1 Mechanical Joined Oct 31, 2001 Messages 2,129 Location US What steel? Upvote 0 Downvote
Jul 10, 2004 Thread starter #3 adela Civil/Environmental Joined Jul 9, 2004 Messages 3 Location US Carbon steel, any type. Upvote 0 Downvote
Jul 22, 2004 #4 Ron Structural Joined Sep 24, 1999 Messages 16,336 Location US American Society for Metals (ASM) Handbook on Fatigue. Upvote 0 Downvote
Jul 26, 2004 Thread starter #5 adela Civil/Environmental Joined Jul 9, 2004 Messages 3 Location US Is there any info on the internet? Upvote 0 Downvote
Jul 26, 2004 #6 boo1 Mechanical Joined Oct 31, 2001 Messages 2,129 Location US I use SAE fatigue Design Handbook (AE-22) or Aerospace Alloy Handbook (Vol 2). For on line info check Mil-HBK-5: http://www.grantadesign.com/cgi-bin/stat-tree.cgi?src=MIL5-H.xml&br=3 Upvote 0 Downvote
I use SAE fatigue Design Handbook (AE-22) or Aerospace Alloy Handbook (Vol 2). For on line info check Mil-HBK-5: http://www.grantadesign.com/cgi-bin/stat-tree.cgi?src=MIL5-H.xml&br=3
Jul 31, 2004 #7 unclesyd Materials Joined Aug 21, 2002 Messages 9,819 Location US Adding to boo1's source. Here is another one. Go to the middle of the page and click on the fatigue data base field and register to log on to the database. http://www.steel.org/autosteel/bar_rod/index.htm Upvote 0 Downvote
Adding to boo1's source. Here is another one. Go to the middle of the page and click on the fatigue data base field and register to log on to the database. http://www.steel.org/autosteel/bar_rod/index.htm