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R S Khurmi Strength Of: Materials

Arjun froze. He had assumed a perfect weld. But his actual support had a sharp internal corner—a classic stress raiser. He added the stress concentration factor from Table 14.3. The theoretical stress doubled. Then he applied the factor of safety. The beam would fail at 80% of the rated load.

Arjun had a problem. His end-semester design project was a simple steel cantilever beam meant to support a small hoist. But his calculations kept showing failure. Every time he computed the bending moment, his answer was off by a factor of ten. His roommate, Rohan, had already submitted his project and was snoring peacefully.

But Arjun now knew it was for something more—for anyone who wanted to build things that wouldn’t break. He patted the book gently. R S Khurmi Strength Of Materials

The tube light buzzed. The beam, in his notebook, stood strong.

And then, in a small note at the bottom of a page—something he’d skipped for months—Khurmi had written in italics: “In practical design, stress concentration at the fixed support often doubles the nominal stress. Always check the joint detail.” Arjun froze

Arjun had always hated this book. It was too thick, too dry, and the problems were sadistically progressive—just when you understood simple tension, it hit you with compound stress and principal planes . But tonight, desperation forced respect.

“Factor of safety,” he muttered, and flipped to Chapter 14: Theories of Failure . He added the stress concentration factor from Table 14

For the first time, Arjun smiled at the book. Khurmi wasn’t just giving formulas—he was teaching engineering judgment. The book was a silent mentor, unforgiving but fair. It never let you guess. It made you derive, verify, and then doubt yourself until you understood.

He closed the book and looked at the worn cover: R. S. Khurmi – Strength of Materials . Underneath, in faded letters: “For B.E., B.Tech., and Competitive Exams.”

“Thank you, sir,” he whispered.