Therefore, if you can determine the color at an edge where one principal strain is zero, you can determine absolute strain. When a part is not conveniently translucent, a reflective paste/adhesive and a transparent plastic plate that becomes pliable when heated is attached to the part. This allows you to determine a strain field on nearly any surface that can be followed by the plastic.
You have fashioned a very simple polariscope! I've used these when determining stress concentration factors on parts that have already been manufactured and it is inconvenient to construct a finite element model. Based on the color boundaries, you can determine the relative strain field. Due to the way birefringence works, the colors seen are directly proportional to the difference in strains in the two orthogonal principal stresses.
that's going in the favourites! very neat. scientific glassblowers do use these to look for stress in the joints after blowing and then again after annealing the glass (which is supposed to equilibrate the stress)
Try wrapping a piece of glass with several layers of clear packaging tape in a random fashion. You'll see a bunch of interesting shapes as you rotate the piece. i wonder if the film blocks all photons with circular or elliptical polarization as well???
Very informational! Maybe that explains why I always see patterns in the car windows, when I am wearing sun glasses..? It's different from car to car, but it mostly looks somewhat like moiré patterns.
Hi, nice info!
Is there a neat way, tips or tricks, to cleanly removing polarizers from lcd screens?
The only try I made was solvent hell, and it didn't help...
Would the freezing effect of dry air cans you used on removing mylar from pinball decks be a good trick for that also?
Thanks a lot!
Btw, I am in awe, you are quite the Polymath!
Some video would make me feel so dumb, and then, there was your video on failure and learning!
YOU RULE!
siouxsettewerks 2 weeks ago
She would be a really good teacher. :)
Jun127 1 month ago
Therefore, if you can determine the color at an edge where one principal strain is zero, you can determine absolute strain. When a part is not conveniently translucent, a reflective paste/adhesive and a transparent plastic plate that becomes pliable when heated is attached to the part. This allows you to determine a strain field on nearly any surface that can be followed by the plastic.
thecheatdx 5 months ago
You have fashioned a very simple polariscope! I've used these when determining stress concentration factors on parts that have already been manufactured and it is inconvenient to construct a finite element model. Based on the color boundaries, you can determine the relative strain field. Due to the way birefringence works, the colors seen are directly proportional to the difference in strains in the two orthogonal principal stresses.
thecheatdx 5 months ago
You Should say: View Stress in Transparent Materials
parmismahdis100 5 months ago
@parmismahdis100 Good point.
jeriellsworth 5 months ago
Jeri, you should make a rotatable polarising lens attachment to fit onto the camera, maybe attaching it with NiB magnets
azayles 1 year ago
that's going in the favourites! very neat. scientific glassblowers do use these to look for stress in the joints after blowing and then again after annealing the glass (which is supposed to equilibrate the stress)
lexichronicle2 1 year ago
Well I know what I'm going to do with this defunct 28" LCD monitor now...
CamsYT 1 year ago
Loved it :)
Intosia 2 years ago
Try wrapping a piece of glass with several layers of clear packaging tape in a random fashion. You'll see a bunch of interesting shapes as you rotate the piece. i wonder if the film blocks all photons with circular or elliptical polarization as well???
kchididdy 2 years ago
Photoshopped
pwntalive 2 years ago
Very informational! Maybe that explains why I always see patterns in the car windows, when I am wearing sun glasses..? It's different from car to car, but it mostly looks somewhat like moiré patterns.
blenderuser 2 years ago
Very possible.
jeriellsworth 2 years ago
Ahh yea,I've noticed that too. It seems like I can see the un-even-ness of the window tinting..
PhattyMo 2 years ago
yeah, those are the residual internal stresses from the manufacturing process.
kchididdy 2 years ago 2
Indeed it is. You have a good pair of sunglasses then. :-)
AMiGR667 2 years ago