Posted on 01/11/2011 9:25:18 PM PST by neverdem
Hmmm. If we were to take your "Wrap Core," and manipulate it...perhaps if we bend, twist and WARP it... it could become an incredible power source. The only problem is what to call it...
Pretzel Drive. Call it a Pretzel Drive.
A Warp Croe!
There was a time when aluminum was very expensive.
Fascinating to see how material manufacture has progressed. Equally fascinating that improvements in the internal combustion motor have kept it ahead of all rivals.
LOL. Reardon Medal. Just what I was thinking. Reading the book now and thinking that I finally got around to reading this book after all these years just as a lot of it is now reality.
Sorry I was thinking about a blunt...a wrap core...
*grin*
Life imitates art.
All the ‘windows’ in the spaceships in Star Wars were made of ‘durasteel’. Imagine it- make it happen!
Anti-gravity next?
Lameness too
Don’t sit on those glass flutes just yet!
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ahahaha
This is somewhat crude from memory. You might want to check an engineering or scientific dictionary. Think of toughness like hardness. Industrial diamonds have a crystal structure. They cut just about everything because they are so hard. I think of strength like in tensile strength. Think of steel - an alloy not unlike glass - cables holding a load off the ground. That's one way to measure strength. Those steel cables will be tested to the load that they fail for strength. Any corrections are always appreciated.
Bistro Math Drive
bflr
By LiveScience Staff
posted: 18 October 2005A new type of transparent armor made of aluminum could one day replace glass in military vehicles. The product is called aluminum oxynitride. It is being tested by the Army and the University of Dayton Research Institute in Ohio. The material is a ceramic compound with a high compressive strength and durability, according to an Army statement issued this week. It performs better than the multilayered glass products currently in use, and its about half the weight. It is virtually scratch-resistant.
"The substance itself is light-years ahead of glass," said 1st Lt. Joseph La Monica, who heads the research.
Glass is still used in the new process, being sandwhiched between an outer layer of the polished aluminum oxynitride and a polymer backing.
In a test this summer, the product held up to a .50-caliber sniper's rifle with amor-piercing bullets. Traditional glass armor did not survive the test.
Officials hope the product will prove even more useful when considering more severe threats, such as explosives.
"The higher the threat, the more savings you're going to get," La Monica said. "With glass, to get the protection against higher threats, you have to keep building layers upon layers. But with [the new product], the material only needs to be increased a few millimeters."
"Achieving protection at lighter weights will allow the armor to be more easily integrated into vehicles," said Ron Hoffman, a researcher at University of Dayton Research Institute.
Cost vs. Durability
Time, blowing sand and other environmental factors degrade glass surfaces. The aluminum material is expected to retain its clarity for much longer.
"It all comes down to survivability and being able to see what's out there and to make decisions while having the added protection," Hoffman said.
The military is considering installing the aluminum windows on Humvees and low-flying, slower aircraft like the the C-130 Hercules.
The holdup for now is price.
Traditional transparent armor costs less than $4 per square inch. The aluminum oxynitride is now at least $10 per square inch. That price would come down with mass production. And the material's longevity would make it cost less than the initial price tag would indicate.
"It might cost more in the beginning, but it is going to cost less in the long run because you are going to have to replace it less," La Monica said.
Strength = amount of force it can withstand before yielding..
I know, still rather cryptic.
Steel = strong and tough, glass=strong, but brittle, therefore not tough. Similarly, hardened steel can be less tough than softer steel, since it is more prone to break when struck..
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