Destructive Testing
Destructive Testing
Testing
DESTRUCTIVE TESTING
Destructive Examination
• Destructive Examination renders the weld or
material unfit for further service.
• To find out how strong, resilient, flexible, or long-
lived a material is often requires the ultimate
sacrifice: the destruction of the sample by
equipment and instruments designed to precisely
measure its performance in the face of an
overwhelming force.
• In destructive testing, tests are carried out to the
specimen's failure, in order to understand a specimen's
structural performance or material behaviour under
different loads. These tests are generally much easier to
carry out, yield more information, and are easier to
interpret than nondestructive testing.
• Destructive testing is most suitable, and economic, for
objects which will be mass produced, as the cost of
destroying a small number of specimens is negligible. It is
usually not economical to do destructive testing where
only one or very few items are to be produced
Common methods used in
Destructive Examination
• Bend testing
• Tensile testing
• Impact testing
• Hardness testing
• Hydrostatic Testing to Destruction
• Peel testing
• Spark testing
• Fatigue Testing
Bend Testing
A: Rockwell
B: Brinell
C: Scleroscope
D: Microhardness
Quiz time
• When a metal stretches, but dose not break under
a certain load, this point is called the _________
Point.
A: yield
B: tensile
C: stretch
D: ultimate strength
Quiz time
• Ductility is the ability of a metal to ________
before it breaks.
A: Bend
B: Stretch or elongate
C: Be forged
D: Be indented
Quiz time
• A Charpy test measures a welds ability to
withstand _________ force.
A: Impact
B: Bending
C: Penetrating
D: Stretching
Quiz time
• Hardness may be defined as the resistance to
__________?
• Indentation
DESTRUCTIVE TESTING