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Industrial radiography is a well-established non-destructive
testing (NDT) method in which the basic principles were established
many years ago. However, during 1993-95 the European Standards
Organisa tion (CEN) commenced drafting many new standards on NDT
including radiographic methods, and when completed these will
replace national standards in all the EC member countries. In some
cases these standards vary significantly from those in use in the
UK at present. These CEN standards are accepted by majority, not
unanimous voting, so they will become mandatory even in countries
which vote against them. As most are likely to be legal by the time
this second edition is published, they are described in the
appropriate places in the text. The most important new technical
development is the greater use of computers in radiology. In the
first edition, computerized tomography was only briefly mentioned
at the end of Chapter 11, as it was then largely a medical method
with only a few equipments having found a place in industrial use.
The method depends on a complex computer program and a large data
store. Industrial equipments are now being built, although their
spread into industry has been slow. Computer data storage is also
being used for radiographic data. Small computers can now store all
the data produced by scanning a radiographic film with a small
light-spot, and various programs can be applied to these data."
Industrial radiography is a well-established non-destructive
testing (NDT) method in which the basic principles were established
many years ago. However, during 1993-95 the European Standards
Organisa tion (CEN) commenced drafting many new standards on NDT
including radiographic methods, and when completed these will
replace national standards in all the EC member countries. In some
cases these standards vary significantly from those in use in the
UK at present. These CEN standards are accepted by majority, not
unanimous voting, so they will become mandatory even in countries
which vote against them. As most are likely to be legal by the time
this second edition is published, they are described in the
appropriate places in the text. The most important new technical
development is the greater use of computers in radiology. In the
first edition, computerized tomography was only briefly mentioned
at the end of Chapter 11, as it was then largely a medical method
with only a few equipments having found a place in industrial use.
The method depends on a complex computer program and a large data
store. Industrial equipments are now being built, although their
spread into industry has been slow. Computer data storage is also
being used for radiographic data. Small computers can now store all
the data produced by scanning a radiographic film with a small
light-spot, and various programs can be applied to these data."
Few manufacturing processes are so standardised, automated, and
rigidly controlled that the product can be guaranteed perfect over
large-scale mass production. If structures are to be constructed to
meet design requirements and materials are to be used economically
and efficiently, some form of testing of the finished product will
almost certainly be necessary. Whenever production depends on human
skills, human errors creep in and faulty products occasionally
occur. With some small products, samples of production can be
extracted and physically tested to destruction without great cost
losses; proof tests can be done on a pressure vessel, or vibration
testing can be carried out to simulate service conditions, but on
many large structures such sampling or proof testing is virtually
impossible. Also, if one postulates occasional human errors,
sampling will not eliminate the defective items and on many
critical components and structures 100 % inspection is often
desirable. Non-destructive testing or inspection (NOT or NOI) are
the terms used to describe a wide range of testing techniques
designed to produce information about the condition of a specimen
without doing any damage to it: i.e. after the testing the fitness
of the specimen for use in service is unchanged.
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