Testing of large structures of a 6-story non-ductile concrete building
Building structures or large
nonbuilding structures (such as dams and bridges) are rarely subjected to destructive testing due to the prohibitive cost of constructing a building, or a scale model of a building, just to destroy it.
Earthquake engineering requires a good understanding of how structures will perform at
earthquakes. Destructive tests are more frequently carried out for structures which are to be constructed in earthquake zones. Such tests are sometimes referred to as
crash tests, and they are carried out to verify the designed
seismic performance of a new building, or the actual performance of an existing building. The tests are, mostly, carried out on a platform called a
shake-table which is designed to shake in the same manner as an earthquake. Results of those tests often include the corresponding shake-table videos. Testing of structures in earthquakes is increasingly done by modelling the structure using specialist
finite element software.
Software testing Destructive software testing is a type of
software testing which attempts to cause a piece of software to fail in an uncontrolled manner, in order to test its robustness and to help establish range limits, within which the software will operate in a stable and reliable manner. ==Automotive testing==