A sacrificial part is a part of a machine or product that is intentionally engineered to fail under excess mechanical stress, electrical stress, or other unexpected and dangerous situations. The sacrificial part is engineered to fail first, thus breaking the serial connection and protecting other parts of the system downstream.[1]
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These Metals Sacrifice Themselves to Prevent Rust
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Cathodic Protection - Galvanic / Sacrificial
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Sacrificial Anode Cathodic Protection Allied Corrosion
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Examples
Examples of sacrificial parts include:
- Electrical fuses
- Over-pressure burst disks
- Mechanical shear pins
- Galvanic anodes
- Pyrotechnic fastener
- Fusible plug
- Some leader lines used in angling
See also
- Factor of safety – System strength beyond intended load
- Frangibility – Material that breaks up into parts instead of deforming as one
- Overengineering – Designing a product in a way that is needlessly complicated, ignoring simpler solutions
References
- ^ Industrial, Cliff (2018-01-17). "Parts are Designed to Break? Sacrificial Parts and Gears". Cliff Industrial. Retrieved 2023-01-13.