AngusMcDoon
Well-Known Member
The attached picture is the fracture cross section of a fitting that attaches my mainsheet top block to the boom. It let go yesterday with a loud bang. The fitting is about 10mm diameter, and the fracture started at an inside bend.
It's ages since I studied metallurgy, so please correct if I am wrong, but it looks like the crack has been there for a while, starting on the left, and slowly growing under the varying stress. Yesterday it reached critical crack length, and grew very quickly until the remaining metal left could not take the load, and that gave way in a plastic manner - the shiny bit on the right.
I remember that crack growth like this is accelerated in a corrosive environment, which salt is slightly to stainless steel.
Apart from this easily replaced item, no other damage occurred. But it's a bit worrying. I wonder how many other cracks in more critical places are slowly and silently creeping towards failure point.
It's ages since I studied metallurgy, so please correct if I am wrong, but it looks like the crack has been there for a while, starting on the left, and slowly growing under the varying stress. Yesterday it reached critical crack length, and grew very quickly until the remaining metal left could not take the load, and that gave way in a plastic manner - the shiny bit on the right.
I remember that crack growth like this is accelerated in a corrosive environment, which salt is slightly to stainless steel.
Apart from this easily replaced item, no other damage occurred. But it's a bit worrying. I wonder how many other cracks in more critical places are slowly and silently creeping towards failure point.
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