The UTS Method Explained – Part 3 – Safety Factors
The factor of safety (FoS) in engineering, particularly in the design of steam boilers, is a measure of how much stronger a system is than it needs to be for its intended load. It is defined as the ratio of the ultimate strength (or failure stress) of a material to the allowable stress (or Working Stress – WS) applied in operation.
Mathematically, it is expressed as:
Factor of Safety = Ultimate Strength / Allowable Stress
Example 1
From the article “The Yield Pont Method ” by Les Smith and Alan Brown, published in Model Engineers & Workshop magazine in Volume 134, Issue 4765, June 2025 edition, page 26.
Taking a known published design for a G.W.R. boiler for a 5” gauge loco from Page 150 of The Model Steam Locomotive as an example, where:
Diameter, D = 4.75″
Working Pressure, WP = 110psi
Test Pressure = 2 x WP = 220psi
Shell Thickness, T = 0.092″
Using Barlow’s Formula. S = (P x D) / (T x 2)
WS (Stress) = (220 x 4.75) / (0.092 x 2)
WS = 5,679 psi
Ultimate Strength for annealed copper = Yield Point for annealed copper (to avoid permanent distortion) = 4,830 psi
Factor of Safety = Ultimate Strength / Allowable Stress
Factor of Safety = 4,830 / 5,679
Factor of Safety = 0.850
Yet the UTS Method proclaims a FOS of 8 (Average)
Clearly the UTS Method is both incorrect and misleading, because it does not allow for the Yield Point of annealed copper.
What you explain is how YOU back calculate a FOS in a given case against a given material property. What you don’t explain is why passing yield or proof stress is deemed a failure. The fact remains as proven by others on here and best part of a century of practice that either method results in a similar and safe design when used with the appropriate Factor of Uncertainty. I use my term deliberately having explained how this mis-named FOS is actually used.
Martin