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The Structural Engineer, Volume 29, Issue 12, 1951
The AUTHOR, introducing the paper, apologised for inflicting on a long-suffering profession yet another method of dealing with prestressed concrete, but explained that he had been horrified at the tendency to overwhelm the subject with formulae and notations, to say nothing of fundamentally unsound assumptions, such as that of using the standard moment of inertia for a beam for calculations outside the non-linear stress strain range. As his job was to teach students, with whom he had already taken some pains to train to think for themselves, he just dared not try to teach them the current unsound theories, and evolved the present technique as a theoretically sounder method.
Gentlemen: My first, most pleasant, and probably simplest duty this evening is to thank you and all other members of the Institution for having elected me President for the coming year. Walter C. Andrews
Pull out tests have shown that the distribution of bond stress along the column is an exponential function, and that the maximum value of bond stress occurs at the loaded end of the steel before any slip takes place, the order of the maximum value being 700 lb./in.2. After initial slip, the position of maximum bond stress moves along the steel, its value remaining sensibly constant. J.M. Hawkes and Professor R.H. Evans