Why NDT?

Nondestructive testing (NDT) is a procedure used to examine and/or inspect materials and components to locate surface and subsurface defects in a way that allows such materials to be examined without changing or destroying their original design or structure.

NDT plays a crucial role in everyday life. It is necessary to assure structural integrity, safety and reliability in aircraft, motor vehicles, pipelines, seafaring vessels, bridges, trains, tunnels, power stations, refineries and oil platforms, all of which are inspected using some method of nondestructive testing.

Nondestructive testing is also a quality assurance production and management tool which can provide impressive results when used correctly. It requires an understanding of the various methods available, their capabilities and limitations, knowledge of the relevant standards and specifications for performing the tests.

Materials, products and equipment that fail to achieve their design requirements or projected life due to undetected defects may require expensive repair or early replacement. Such defects may also be the cause of unsafe conditions or catastrophic failure, as well as loss of revenue due to unplanned shutdowns.

Applications

Analyzing and documenting a non-destructive failure mode can also be accomplished using a high-speed camera recording continuously (movie-loop) until the failure is detected. Detecting the failure can be accomplished using a sound detector or stress gauge which produces a signal to trigger the high-speed camera. These high-speed cameras have advanced recording modes to capture some non-destructive failures.[5] After the failure the high-speed camera will stop recording. The capture images can be played back in slow motion showing precisely what happen before, during and after the non-destructive event, image by image.

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