Box |
(english) Interanl (female) threaded end. |
Brake |
(english) A piece of equipment used for bending sheet; also called a bar folder. If operated manually, it is called a hand brake; if power driven, it is called a press brake. |
Brake Press Bending |
(english) An operation which produces various degree bends when fabricating parts from steel. |
Bridling |
(english) The cold working of dead soft annealed strip metal immediately prior to a forming, bending, or drawing operation. A process designed to prevent the formulation of Luder's lines. Caution-Bridled metal should be used promptly and not permitted to (of itself) return to its pre-bridled condition. |
Brittleness |
(english) The tendency of a metal or material to fracture without undergoing appreciable plastic deformation. |
Burr |
(english) The very subtle ridge on the edge of strip steel left by cutting operations such as slitting, trimming, shearing, or blanking. For example, as a steel processor trims the sides of the sheet steel parallel or cuts a sheet of steel into strips, its edges will bend with the direction of the cut. |
Butt end |
(english) The residual portion of an extrusion billet that is not forced through the die at the end of the extrusion cycle. |
Butt Welding |
(english) Joining two edges or ends by placing one against the other and welding them. |
Z-Mill |
(english) The full name for z-mill is Sendzimir mill. A Z-mill operates with a very small diameter work roll, normally about 2 inches, backed up by a number of rolls in a pyramid-shaped stack. This roll set up allows you to exert extremely high forces through the work roll and yet keep the work roll from extreme flexing. The take-up roll on the Z-Mill also exerts a tension on the coil as it comes through the mill. The combination of high pressure and tension makes the mill capable of rolling material thin and flat. |
Bending moment: |
(english) A system of internal forces whose resultant is a moment. This term is most commonly used to refer to internal forces in beams. |