steel and titanium fatigue
not wishing to be pedantic but the statement "Not true for steel or titanium - a frame made from either will last for ever unless one of two things happen"
is not true.
All metals will suffer from fatigue under cyclic loading and the fatigue is cumulative. Steel may have a higher cumulative tolerance than aluminium alloys but it has a finite life under cyclic loading.
A good example would be car suspension springs - especially of the leaf type. Other examples of the top of my head would be certain bridges and structures failing.
If aluminium was used of course then the limit would be reached much earlier but to say steel doesn't suffer from fatigue is just plain wrong.
Theres plenty of stuff on web about fatigue in metals
not wishing to be pedantic but the statement "Not true for steel or titanium - a frame made from either will last for ever unless one of two things happen"
is not true.
All metals will suffer from fatigue under cyclic loading and the fatigue is cumulative. Steel may have a higher cumulative tolerance than aluminium alloys but it has a finite life under cyclic loading.
A good example would be car suspension springs - especially of the leaf type. Other examples of the top of my head would be certain bridges and structures failing.
If aluminium was used of course then the limit would be reached much earlier but to say steel doesn't suffer from fatigue is just plain wrong.
Theres plenty of stuff on web about fatigue in metals