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#1
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Stainless steel forks
Hello can you help please
I intend buying a stainless garden fork for general purpose use. I have seen in B&Q a fork for £11.00 , this has square tines rather than the usual round tines. Is this type of fork good for heavy digging and also has it the strength of the round tines. Also it is half the price of the other forks ! .................Leslie |
#2
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Stainless steel forks
In article , "Therefore" writes: | | I intend buying a stainless garden fork for general purpose use. I have seen | in B&Q a fork for £11.00 , this has square tines rather than the usual round | tines. | | Is this type of fork good for heavy digging and also has it the strength of | the round tines. It depends on its construction, the quality of the metal, and the gauge of the tines. Square tines are 18% stronger than round ones. Stainless steel can be anything from excellent to dire, and light gauge tines will bend or break no matter what they are made from. But, generally, total failure more often occurs where the handle attaches to the tine unit, or at the 'neck' just above the horizontal that connects the tines. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#3
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Stainless steel forks
Nick Maclaren wrote:
In article , "Therefore" writes: I intend buying a stainless garden fork for general purpose use. I have seen in B&Q a fork for £11.00 , this has square tines rather than the usual round tines. Is this type of fork good for heavy digging and also has it the strength of the round tines. It depends on its construction, the quality of the metal, and the gauge of the tines. Square tines are 18% stronger than round ones. For a given cross-sectional area? It would be interesting to know how the strength was measured. Stainless steel can be anything from excellent to dire, and light gauge tines will bend or break no matter what they are made from. But, generally, total failure more often occurs where the handle attaches to the tine unit, or at the 'neck' just above the horizontal that connects the tines. I tend to agree with all that, but if the OP has sandy or more-or-less good quality soil, then I doubt he will break or bend the fork under almost any circumstances. But if we are talking about solid clay with ironstone lumps in it, I wouldn't trust even a JCB to survive undamaged. -- Jeff (cut "thetape" to reply) |
#4
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Stainless steel forks
In article , "Jeff Layman" writes: | In article , | "Therefore" writes: | | I intend buying a stainless garden fork for general purpose use. I | have seen in B&Q a fork for £11.00 , this has square tines rather | than the usual round tines. | | Is this type of fork good for heavy digging and also has it the | strength of the round tines. | | It depends on its construction, the quality of the metal, and the | gauge of the tines. Square tines are 18% stronger than round ones. | | For a given cross-sectional area? It would be interesting to know how the | strength was measured. Yes. Calculated. O-level physics and/or mathematics. You are welcome to repeat the calculation and tell me that I am losing my grip :-) Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
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