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shear Force that causes a body to shift away from the acting force where it is not supported.
Ãâó: www.ehmkemanufacturing.com/resources/glossary.html
shear stress the Stress resulting from the application of forces parallel to each other, but in opposite directions. A Shear failure is one in which the material rips or tears as a result of the applied Shear Stress.
Ãâó: www.ces.clemson.edu/arts/glossary.html
shear In two-dimensional problems, shape aspects of any affine transformation can be diagrammed as a pure shear, a map taking a square to a parallelogram of unchanged base segment and height. This is a transformation that leaves one Cartesian coordinate, y, invariant and alters the other by a translation that is a multiple of y: for instance, what happens when you slide the top of a square sideways without altering its vertical position or the length of the horizontal edges. ...
Ãâó: life.bio.sunysb.edu/morph/glossary/gloss2.html
shear strength Maximum shear stress that can be sustained by a material before rupture. It is the ultimate strength of a material subjected to shear loading. It can be determined in a torsion test where it is equal to torsional strength. The shear strength of a plastic is the maximum load required to shear a specimen in such a manner that the resulting pieces are completely clear of each other. It is reported in psi based on the area of the sheared edge (ASTM D-732). ...
Ãâó: 66.207.86.189/web2005/support/glossary.htm
shear strength The ability of a material to withstand a stress that makes two contacting parts slide upon each other in opposite directions. SOLIDS Non-evaporating material. TACK Stickiness of an adhesive.
Ãâó: www.primeresins.com/onlineresources/epoxy_definiti...
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