Abstract

Extrapolation of elevated-temperature, tensile-hold fatigue life of types 304 and 316 stainless steel is obtained by the use of four existing life predictive methods. The results show that, although the calculated lives for the different methods are similar for short hold-time tests, they can vary greatly from one method to another when extrapolated to long hold-time situations. Methods that do not take into account the effects of strain rate provide optimistic values as opposed to the more pessimistic values projected by the methods that account for strain-rate effects.

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