As the person you can all blame for starting this thread, can I request a bit of cool. 20 posts yesterday and 16 already today (at the time I started writing this one )is a lot to digest. Restraint, respect, and sticking somewhere near the point, please.
Trying to address some of these:
I am not a traditionalist reactionary. Any proposed change of design criteria needs to to be thoroughly explored.
Right now I do not have access to the AMBSC codes so I don’t know what they say about permanent set in copper boilers. The AMBSC codes are not something with which I would lightly take issue.
The debate is not about the details of a rather trivial calculation, but about the design philosophy for a structure made with annealed copper.
Annealed copper does not behave exactly like mild steel under stress, so comparisons should be treated with caution. In particular, copper work hardens and mild steel does not.
Nick Farr – In a tensile test, stressing a ductile material beyond yield and into plastic deformation does not lead to failure. That only happens if you keep on increasing the load. If you take the load some way beyond yield and into the plastic region, and the relax the load, the test piece will relax through the elastic range, but it will have some permanent deformation. If you increase the load again, to the same as before, then there will be no further plastic deformation. The test piece will stretch elastically to the same total amount of deflection as before.
“Deformation of the boiler when undergoing testing is a sign of weakness in the design or manufacture of the boiler… “ What does ‘sign of weakness’ mean? As has already been said, most builders will have conducted their own pressure tests on a boiler before submitting it to the inspectors, or is that not allowed? If we are talking about the first ever pressurisation after construction of a copper boiler, then yes, I would say that some permanent deformation may well be expected and acceptable, and is not necessarily a sign of weakness. Can anyone tell me that a bit of work hardening is bad or dangerous?
In many instances yield point, or proof stress design is perfectly adequate, but it should be remembered that it is still a relatively crude method full of assumptions – but then so is designing on the basis of a UTS that seems to be ill-defined.
Credentials: I graduated in mechanical engineering from Imperial College, London, in 1975, and am an A.M.I.Mech.E. (In my subsequent engineering career I never needed to go for full professional status.) I have little practical experience of making model boilers. I am not a metalurgist.
The clarity and precision of an article, with all the riders and caveats, does not mean that people will not misunderstand it. You only need to look around this forum to see people answering questions they obviously did not properly read!