Straw maybe. It already is allowed for low strength use in things like curbs and such...
I think they used it in the roadway they built in town. It feels like driving on a washboard in my daily driver and rattles my teeth in my Cobra!
Straw maybe. It already is allowed for low strength use in things like curbs and such...
Specifically, MULTINATIONAL corporations (iow, Demonkkkrat allies).Corporations are increasingly Woke, arguing that America Sucks!
You are a nonsense-spouting fool.
https://www.rescue.org/article/it-legal-cross-us-border-seek-asylum
Tell us, oh knowledgeable one, just what was the tinsel strength of the steels used? .
I have to admit. That made me laugh.
City code determines the specs but it doesn't matter to China made Trump ties because he doesn't pay his contractors for their work.Rebar in the US is manufactured to ASTM A615 among other specifications. It is stamped to show the grade, etc., of it (Size is in 1/8th's of an inch so #4 rebar is 1/2" diameter for example)
![]()
The biggest problem is imported rebar. Chinese made in particular cannot be trusted to meet the spec it claims to be made to. It's a big enough problem that the Chinese government is finally beginning to crackdown on manufacturers there to improve quality because of building and structural failures in China.
City code determines the specs but it doesn't matter to China made Trump ties because he doesn't pay his contractors for their work.
That's because you don't know fuck about steels.
EDIT: Yeah. I misspelled it. it's spelled Tinsile
The point is that steel specs aren't closely inspected in concrete buildings.Wrong. ASTM (formerly this acronym stood for American Society for Testing Materials) determines the specs for rebar steel in the US. Building code, usually Universal Building Code for commercial structures, specifies requirements like the amount and size of rebar. But the rebar itself is made to ASTM standards. A builder generally is not going to be required to test materials for compliance to those specifications but rather relies on the supplier to have made the product correctly. The problem with Chinese made materials is the factories often will fudge the testing or do it in compliance until certified then lower standards or drop them entirely once the testing agency leaves.
This happened with many Chinese products. An infamous one was Chinese made drywall.
You can start here on that disaster:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_drywall
You are obviously incompetent in steels, stupid foreigner. Go back to fucking goats.
The point is that steel specs aren't closely inspected in concrete buildings.
ROFLMAO.. You still misspelled it. I knew you meant tensile but I just found tinsel to be funny.
Over the years I have done a lot of calculations using steel tensile strength. I have just never calculated the number of pieces of 36" tinsel needed to support 1,000 pounds with a minimal deflection.
Says the sad paleface who spouts his knowledge of ' the tinsel strength of steel '
Go home to Europe, home of your forebears.
Oh yeah- and a merry christmas.
Haw, haw.................................haw.
It's good to have you in group therapy with us.Other than checking the grade stamped on it, no. What is inspected is the correct size is used, the spacing is correct, the overlap and ties are correct, etc. That is all inspected.
It's good to have you in group therapy with us.
Well, I know that stuff because I did it for a living. While I didn't and don't do a lot of concrete work I do enough to know the rules on it. I even own one of these:
![]()
https://www.grainger.com/product/43...44f9ef5a57f31c3aecc08fce4e322e3d&gclsrc=3p.ds
You don't plop down $500 + for a tool if you don't use and need it...
Like what "more readily available, affordable, and obtainable materials" would those be? Do you want battery powered plastic cars?
When it comes to tools, if you need it once, you buy it because it looks cool on your shelf. The price doesn't matter.
Ask yourself- WHAT IS MY COBRA MADE OUT OF?
I can guarantee you- it is not a STEEL BODY!