It is extremely sound. It is build from granite and concrete and the foundation is sitting on solid granite so it isn’t going anywhere. The metal portions do swing a bit but that’s normal since metal naturally is flexible. However, all of the welds are professionally done so it isn’t going anywhere. Honestly I think the structure will stay solid for a few decades at least. The son is making repairs as needed so it probably will last much longer.
And you are telling me those are less flexible than tungsten carbide? They are rubber in comparison. Young’s modulus for WC is 550 GPa. Granite is about 70 GPa and concrete about 30 GPa. Oh, steel is at 200 GPa.
So what is the actual reason you see metal flexing when it is actually far harder to flex it?
It doesn’t look structurally sound, but I’m sure he slapped it and said “that baby ain’t goin’ anywhere”
It is extremely sound. It is build from granite and concrete and the foundation is sitting on solid granite so it isn’t going anywhere. The metal portions do swing a bit but that’s normal since metal naturally is flexible. However, all of the welds are professionally done so it isn’t going anywhere. Honestly I think the structure will stay solid for a few decades at least. The son is making repairs as needed so it probably will last much longer.
What is not flexible? There are springs made from tungsten carbide.
Concrete and granite
And you are telling me those are less flexible than tungsten carbide? They are rubber in comparison. Young’s modulus for WC is 550 GPa. Granite is about 70 GPa and concrete about 30 GPa. Oh, steel is at 200 GPa.
So what is the actual reason you see metal flexing when it is actually far harder to flex it?