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Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
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#18
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Michael Daly wrote:
On 28-Apr-2005, Unquestionably Confused wrote: To overbuild is never a crime Overbuilt can cause a failure. For example, if something is designed and built correctly, it will tend to show excessive deflections before failure, providing a warning. Overbuilt things can fail spectacularly without any warning. Where you run into the kind of problem you describe is when a strong but brittle material is substituted for a weaker but more ductile material. The ductile material will bend before it breaks, the brittle material will simply break. As for something "designed and built correctly" showing "excessive deflections before failure", certainly one can design things that way but that doesn't mean that it's the only correct way. Concrete for example doesn't flex noticeably before it breaks so by your reasoning concrete should never be used as a building material. When dealing with wooden beams, making the beam stronger than called for is not going to result in sudden failure with no warning unless the original design would also fail suddenly with no warning at a lighter load. That could be a crime or at least expose you to a civil lawsuit. I would like you to quote the statute which makes it a criminal offense to build something stronger than is required. Or provide reference to a civil case where someone was successfully sued for building something stronger than was specified. Mike -- --John to email, dial "usenet" and validate (was jclarke at eye bee em dot net) |
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