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Lupke pendulum

Resilience measured by an impact or rebound method. See Lupke Pendulum, Tripsometer. Recapping... [Pg.52]

An obsolescent name for any apparatus for measuring resilience, formerly commonly applied to the Lupke Pendulum. [Pg.53]

In fact, these values correspond to those for the well known Lupke pendulum and also for a modified version of the Schob pendulum. [Pg.182]

Figure 9-6. Rebound resilience apparatus, (a) Lupke pendulum (b) Schob pendulum (c) Dunlop pendulum (d) Goodyear-Healey pendulum (e) tripsometer (m = off-centre mass) (f)... Figure 9-6. Rebound resilience apparatus, (a) Lupke pendulum (b) Schob pendulum (c) Dunlop pendulum (d) Goodyear-Healey pendulum (e) tripsometer (m = off-centre mass) (f)...
The Dunlop tripsometer is an unusual design of pendulum consisting of a 42 cm diameter steel disc mounted on bearings and with an out of balance mass in the form of a bracket carrying the 4 mm diameter indentor attached to its periphery. It operates at considerably higher strain energy density than the ISO method but is claimed to have high accuracy and can be used with a relatively small test piece. Compared to the Lupke pendulum, it is also a very compact apparatus. [Pg.183]


See other pages where Lupke pendulum is mentioned: [Pg.38]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.185]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.182 , Pg.184 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.502 ]




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