This
site is a 4-storey building with basement, designed by T.R.
Smith and built in 1873. The building houses the testing machine
designed by David Kirkaldy (1820-1897) who was born in Mayfield,
just outside Dundee. The testing machine was first installed
nearby, in The Grove, and opened on January 1st 1866. The
Southwark St. building opened on 1st January 1874.
The testing machine
was built during 1864/65 by Greenwood & Batley of Leeds.
It is 47 ft 6 inches long, 4 ft 3.5 inches wide and weighs
almost 116 tons. It was designed "for the purpose of
testing all kinds of constructive materials" by putting
these materials "under various stresses, namely, Pulling,
Thrusting, Bending, Twisting, Shearing, Punching and Bulging."
Kirkaldy's works
soon attained a world-wide reputation for excellence and integrity
in independent materials testing. Among its many achievements,
the machine performed tests for Blackfriars road bridge (opened
1869), the St. Louis Bridge over the Mississippi (built 1867-74),
the Hammersmith Suspension Bridge (opened 1887), the Sydney
Harbour Bridge, and the cables used to suspend 'The Skylon'
at the 1951 Festival of Britain. The machine was also used
in accident investigations, such as the 1879 Tay Bridge disaster
and the crash of Britain's Comet airliner in the 1950s.
The machine has
a hydraulic ram (with a stroke of 3 ft) for putting materials
under stress. Initially, a steam powered pump provided the
high pressure water, but from 1905 it was supplied by the
London Hydraulic Power Company. Samples to be tested are placed
in the machine, which has a maximum pull of 1 million lbs.
In order to measure
the load applied to the test sample a steelyard is used. A
steelyard is a lever balance with a weight (known as a counterpoise)
suspended from it. The counterpoise is moved along the steelyard
until it balances. There is a scale along the steelyard, so
you can tell from the position of the counterpoise what load
is being applied.
As the ram moves
it causes the steelyard to tilt. The counterpoise is then
moved to level the steelyard. A precise measurement of the
loading is then read off the steelyard.
The Kirkaldy Testing
& Experimenting Works was run by three generations of
the Kirkaldy family. The works was sold in 1965 when David
Kirkaldy's grandson (also named David Kirkaldy) retired. It
was purchased by Treharne & Davis Ltd, who continued testing
materials until 1974 when the works closed.
Since 1984 the
upper floors of the building have been reused as offices.
The machine remains, now restored to working order, and the
ground floor and basement form the Kirkaldy Testing Museum.
Sources of information
:
Standing
the Test of Time, published by the Kirkaldy Testing
Museum.
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