I think the concern still remains, you have to quantify the kink. Again from physical test data there will be multiple kinks which could be smoothed in many different ways (eg regression). I agree a clear bifurcation would be difficult for a team to explain away, but you have to somehow define what that constitutes which is obviously tricky. Devil is in the details as it were.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑01 Jun 2021, 12:32One can carry out the test several times. Plot the results of deflection v force applied. If it hockey sticks at a certain point but is still responding elastically then that's a design that's been created to give a moveable aero benefit without being caught by the current single load test.cooken wrote: ↑01 Jun 2021, 12:16What was meant was: what if you double the load, and get 2.01x the deflection? Is that ok? What about 2.05? 2.1? Remember this is real life and physical tests will never show a perfectly straight line. Linearity is a silly assumption we all learned in school to make things easy, and it's good enough for only very simple problems. The real world is always nonlinear (recall engineering stress vs true stress for example).
PS: As Canadian I appreciate your hockey stick analogy, nice.