Abstract
AbstractData were studied from tests of new and weathered rectangular annealed glass samples, each consisting of numerous specimens, loaded to fracture. The maximum principal tensile stress at the fracture origin was compared with the single largest maximum principal tensile stress (SLMPTS) within each specimen. The findings indicated that maximum principal tensile stresses at the fracture origins were always less, often significantly so, than SLMPTS in the specimens. In addition, fracture origins rarely, if ever, coincided with the location of SLMPTS in a rectangular glass lite specimen. These results support the notion that glass thickness selection should not be based on a maximum principal stress method.
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