I have personally seen 3 tost ring failures at my gliding club this season,
(the
last one only about 3 hours ago!) these were all the large rings on the
strops,
not the ring pair that goes to the release, unfortunately I have not been
able
to recover any of the rings to see the failure mode, however I was
examining
the rings on the other strops and found a couple that were obviously of
welded construction, and one was clearly oval rather than round, I don't
know
the age of them but they get very heavy use.
Ben.
At 03:16 07 June 2017, Frank Whiteley wrote:
>On Tuesday, June 6, 2017 at 2:51:26 PM UTC-6, John Carlyle wrote:
>> Frank,
>>=20
>> When there are "conical male/female shapes at the failure point" it
>gener=
>ally indicates tensile overload failure (caused by exceeding the
materials
>=
>tensile strength). A giveaway would be necking on either side of these
>shap=
>es, which might be what you're calling failure "at the weld taper".=20
>>=20
>> Fatigue looks very different - the fracture surface shows a smaller
>smoot=
>h portion surrounding the origin, with the remainder of the fracture
>surfac=
>e appearing granular (perhaps what you're calling calling
>"crystallization"=
>.. Fatigue failure is caused by thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, of
>loa=
>d variation in the presence of a small defect in the part (usually on the
>s=
>urface).=20
>>=20
>> These are two completely different failure modes, and have two
>completely=
> different causes. It would be interesting to see pictures of the actual
>fa=
>iled ring and the fracture surface.=20
>>=20
>> -John =20
>>=20
>> On Tuesday, June 6, 2017 at 4:26:34 PM UTC-4, Frank Whiteley wrote:
>> > > We had a TOST large ring failure while winch launching at a CAP
>Fligh=
>t Academy a few years ago. It failed at the weld taper and the ring also
>b=
>roke opposite the weldment with the appearance of fatigue crystallization
>a=
>t the break. So, it's possible several launches were done with the
failed
>=
>weld before the ring failed at the second point. It was reported back to
>t=
>he vendor and also to TOST IIRC. Locally we discussed if perhaps some
>coun=
>terfeit supplies were getting into the channel. The academy leader
passed
>=
>away some time after the academy so I don't know the result of the report
>b=
>ut perhaps the vendor will recall the event. I'll check.
>> > >=20
>> > > Frank Whiteley
>> >=20
>> > I'll amend my post to say that it was not evident that the failed
ring
>=
>was welded, but that separation had conical male/female shapes at the
>failu=
>re point. Looking for images in the archives, but nothing so far.
>> >=20
>> > Frank Whiteley
>
>John,
>
>I think you've described it accurately. Still checking around for images.
>=
>They may not exist. This happened around 2009 and the rings certainly
had
>=
>not seen that many cycles. Not aware that anyone attempted to load test
>th=