Thanks again everyone for taking the time to reply. Really appreciate all the activity in the thread.
Material Properties from Matweb:
A source that lists bend strength for Delrin:
Dougt115 said:
From the geometry of the samples I would expect that the Delrin's elongation allowed it to deform and decrease the stress concentrations. This would allow it to come closer to the yield rating of the material. The other material being brittle would not deform and the stress concentration would cause failure below the rated yield strength.
Truly these are poor samples to do any real comparison on.
Dougt115, I suspect you are correct in saying that stress concentrations are the root cause for brittle PBT failing before its rated yield strength. It could either be stress concentrations caused by ridges increasing the distance from the neutral axis, or it could be sharp internal corners at the base of some lettering on the plaques.
The failure crack follows the contours of some of the letters in a very suspicious manner, as can be seen on page 3 of the attached pdf.
I agree that these are poor samples to do any real comparison on. Luckily I am not doing a real comparison between them; rather I am attempting to correlate some observations from a simple test to my understanding of the underlying theories of material mechanics.
racookpe1978 said:
OK, so the two cards were bent until one broke.
Almost crudely put, but so what?
I had a certain expectation based on my understanding of the theory.
I observed a different outcome than expected in a rough, poorly controlled test.
I am seeking to rectify the discrepancy in my understanding of the theory.
LittleInch said:
The reason you're getting "strange" results is that the test is not a yield strength test, but a bending test. However the bending forces and stresses the sample experiences are quite different. The much stiffer material will have a much higher bending stress at the point of your hand than the more flexible material which allowed a bigger bending radius to develop which greatly reduces bending stress.
If instead you had clamped your sample to the edge of the desk then clamped a much stronger item to the overhanging portion such that the bending force was concentrated in a small length then applied different loads to the over hanging section then I think you'll find that the stiffer stronger material will hold more load than the other.
Or you could tape / fix a sample to a open file or book and try and close it, holding the sample to the face of the file forcing the same bending radius on both samples.
Interesting, does ASTM D790 control the bend radius of the test subjects? Based on this video, it appears to me they do not:
Valox 420, Flexural Strength, ASTM D790: 186 Mpa (27,000 psi)
“Delrin”, Flexural Strength, ASTM D790: 11,500 psi
This would imply a relationship between Young’s Modulus and bending strength when loaded in bending. I will do more reading on this.
dhengr said:
And finally, is this really the true state of professional engineering and technical activity and inquiry these days? Talk about scientific inquiry with a few uncertainties and ambiguities, I hope your product design is better founded than your material research.
Just trying to rectify my understanding of theory with (crude) experimental observations.
Cowski said:
It sounds like you performed a flexural strength test on the parts. Compare the flexural strength characteristics on the data sheets to see if they correspond better to your informal test results.
Also bear in mind that the injection molding process will tend to orient some filler materials (such as glass fibers) and the end product may have a "grain". It may be that you bent the glass filled plaque along the 'weak' axis.
Valox 420, Flexural Strength, ASTM D790: 186 Mpa (27,000 psi)
“Delrin”, Flexural Strength, ASTM D790: 11,500 psi
No correlation.
Based on gate location, I absolutely was bending it along the “weak” axis, good catch! In your experience will material properties for a filled material be at least as good as the base material (PBT unfilled) or could it actually be compromised by the presence of filler?
Compositepro said:
If you had one sample made of rubber, you would not be able to break it using all of your strength. That does not mean that rubber is a stronger material.
Umm, actually I think that the vernacular “stronger” would be totally applicable to a rubber material whose break (engineering) stress of the bulk material was higher than Delrin or 30GF PBT. Of course it’s Young’s Modulus would be much less than either of the named plastics. Perhaps you misread my question Compositepro.