Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2016
The electrical measurement of strain is an art which has been developed gradually over a considerable number of years. It will be realised that the electrical measurement of strain includes the electrical magnification and measurement of a strain indicated by a non-electrical pick-up, such as a mechanical strain gauge, as well as the case of pure electrical measurement in which the pick-up unit itself operates electrically.
The principal reasons for the popularity of electrical gauges are their ability to record data at a station remote from the point of application of the gauge, thus allowing gauges to be attached in positions which would be inaccessible for direct measurement by mechanical or optical means, and the high dynamic response of the electric gauge which renders the gauge invaluable for dynamic work.
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Note on Page 607 * “Noise” was a convenient term to include all spurious voltages in the circuit due to external causes.
Note on Page 607 † See Proc.I.Mech.E. Vol. 152, p. 240.
Note on Page 608 * Except by reference to the relative phase of the output.
Note on Page 608 † See the writer's paper “Electrical Resistance Strain Gauges …” read before the Institute of Marine Engineers, March 16, 1946.
Note on Page 608 § See Pat. No. 19865/43.
Note on Page 611 * A. V. de Forest and H. Leaderman: The Development of Electrical Strain Gauges. N.A.C.A. Tech.Note, No. 744 p. 3.