Visit the Micromeritics web site

Testing building glass

A Testometric product story
Edited by the Laboratorytalk editorial team Sep 27, 2004

Since glass in buildings is very rarely used in direct tension, the most important property is the tensile bending strength

Glass has a very high compressive strength and consequently always fails under tensile stress.

Since glass in buildings is very rarely used in direct tension, the most important property is the tensile bending strength.

The European Standard EN 1288-3:2000 calls for a four-point bend test with spans of 1000mm and 200mm and a sample width of 360mm.

In order to protect the operatives, this machine is provided with a separate control console enabling the whole test frame to be positioned in a safety cell.

Special on-board software allows post-test input of parameters in order to meet the test reporting demands of EN 1288-3 and DIN 52 303.

Not what you're looking for? Search the site.

Back to top Back to top

Contact Testometric

Related Stories

Contact Testometric
Newsletter sign up

Request your free weekly copy of the Laboratorytalk email newsletter ...

Visit the Micromeritics web site

Search by company

A Pro-talk Publication

A Pro-talk publication