T C T P P 545
Ifthe same event occurred to an oak panel 1.25 cm thick (with the
other two dimensions the same), the bending stresses would be 9.8 Mpa.
Even though the 1.25 cm thick panel weighs half as much as the 2.54 cm
one, it incurs twice the stress. The measured breaking stress of white oak
at room temperature and 50% RH is approximately 8.9 Mpa. The thinner
panel will likelycrack in a 50-G topple accident. The 2.54 cm thick panel
would require a 100-G topple impact to crack it. If either panel were sup-
ported continuously around the edges, the risk of damage would decrease
by a factor offive.
0 20 40 60 80 100
Station (cm)
Sh
ea
rfo
rce
(N
)
2
1
0
21
22
23
24
3 1 Richard fig 19 eps
Figure 19
Shear in newtons (N) for a 2.54 cm wide strip
ofa 100 3 150 x 2.54 cm thick panel subjected
to a 50-G topple accident.
0 20 40 60 80 100
Station (cm)
Be
nd
ing
mo
me
nt
(c
m-
N)
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
31 Richard fig 20 eps
Figure 20
Bending-moment diagram for a 2.54 cm wide
strip ofa 100 3150 3 2.54 cm thick panel
subjected to a 50-G topple accident. The
bending moments of panels subjected to
topples can be quite high.