As a new employee in a bicycle shop, you learn that customers will frequently seek advice regarding
Question:
1. If the material had been cold-drawn aluminum tubing (i.e., strain hardened), explain what may have occurred during the repair. What is the probable cause of the second fracture? Was the weld in any way defective? Was the second failure related to the welding repair?
2. If the tubing had been strengthened by age harden-ing, could the same results have occurred? Explain.
3. Is there a better means of repairing the original frac-ture? What would have been your recommendation?
b. You learn that titanium offers the strength of heat-treated steel at approximately half of the weight. Magnesium, while not as strong as steel or aluminum, is the lightest-weight engineering metal. Could bicycle frames be constructed from these materials, and if so, how would they be assembled?
c. If the bicycle frame deflects, motion of the cyclist and related energy are wasted. Therefore, a rigid frame is desirable. Beryllium are an extremely rigid, lightweight metal. Can it be used as a material for bicycle frames?
d. Composite materials can be used to produce tailored sets of properties. Fiber-reinforced composites can have extremely high rigidity in the direction of fiber ori-entation, coupled with extremely light weight. If you were to assemble a composite frame using fiber-reinforced tubing, how would you join the assembly?
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Related Book For
Materials and process in manufacturing
ISBN: 978-0471656531
9th edition
Authors: E. Paul DeGarmo, J T. Black, Ronald A. Kohser
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