Bridle Unit |
(english) A three-roll cluster used to control line tension at strategic locations on the line. |
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. |
Concentrated force: |
(english) A force considered to act along a single line in space. Concentrated forces are useful mathematical idealizations, but cannot be found in the real world, where all forces are either body forces acting over a volume or surface forces acting over an area. |
Linear: |
(english) A structure is said to behave linearly when its the deformation response is directly proportional to the loading (i.e. doubling the load doubles the displacement response). For a material, linear means that the stress is directly proportional to the strain. |
Line of Action: |
(english) The line of action of a force is the infinite line defined by extending along the direction of the force from the point where the force acts. |
Linear Elastic: |
(english) A force-displacement relationship which is both linear and elastic. For a structure, this means the deformation is proportional to the loading, and deformations disappear on unloading. For a material, the concept is the same except strain substitutes for deformation, and stress substitutes for load. |
Modulus of elasticity: |
(english) The proportional constant between stress and strain for material with linear elastic behavior: calculated as stress divided by strain. Modulus of elasticity can be interpreted as the slope of the stress-strain graph. It is usually denoted as E, sometimes known as Young's Modulus Y, or E-Modulus. |
Shear modulus: |
(english) The ratio of shear stress divided by the corresponding shear strain in a linear elastic material. |
Translation: |
(english) Motion of an object where the path of every point is a straight line. |
Transmissibility: |
(english) The principle stating that a force has the same external effect on an object regardless of where it acts along its line of action. |