[The Mechanical Properties of Wood by Samuel J. Record]@TWC D-Link book
The Mechanical Properties of Wood

PART III TIMBER TESTING[56] [Footnote 56: The methods of timber testing described here are for the most part those employed by the U
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For tests in transverse bending, compression, and cleavage the specimen is placed between the movable head and the platform, and a direct compression force applied.
Testing machines are usually calibrated to a portion of their capacity before leaving the factory.

The delicacy of the weighing levers is verified by determining the number of pounds necessary to move the beam between the stops while a load of 1,000 pounds rests on the platform.

The usual requirement is that ten pounds should accomplish this movement.
The size of machine suitable for compression tests on 2" X 2" sticks or for 2" X 2" beams with 26 to 36-inch span has a capacity of 30,000 pounds.
SPEED OF TESTING MACHINE In instructions for making static tests the rate of application of the stress, _i.e._, the speed of the machine, is given because the strength of wood varies with the speed at which the fibres are strained.

The speed of the crosshead of the testing machine is practically never constant, due to mechanical defects of the apparatus and variations in the speed of the motor, but so long as it does not exceed 25 per cent the results will not be appreciably affected.

In fact, a change in speed of 50 per cent will not cause the strength of the wood to vary more than 2 per cent.[58] [Footnote 58: See Tiemann, Harry Donald: The effect of the speed of testing upon the strength and the standardization of tests for speed.Proc.Am.Soc.for Testing Materials, Vol.


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