Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 June 2016
It is now more than 25 years since Coker and Filon first developed photoelasticity as a practicable method of exploring the stress distribution in certain types of engineering components. All engineers must be familiar with the striking photographs of fringe patterns obtained by their method in stressed plates of various shapes viewed in a polariscope. In those early days observations were made on Xylonite models and the method was only applicable to components in which stress distribution was of a two-dimensional type. Moreover, with the apparatus then available investigations were somewhat difficult and many engineers at that time were very distrustful of the results obtained from what was, to them, a little understood laboratory technique.