Mechanical shock has the potential for damaging an item (e.g., an entire
light bulb) or an element of the item (e.g. a filament in an
Incandescent light bulb): • A
brittle or fragile item can fracture. For example, two crystal wine glasses may shatter when impacted against each other. A
shear pin in an engine is designed to fracture with a specific magnitude of shock. Note that a soft
ductile material may sometimes exhibit brittle failure during shock due to
time-temperature superposition. • A
malleable item can be bent by a shock. For example, a copper pitcher may bend when dropped on the floor. • Some items may appear to be not damaged by a single shock but will experience
fatigue failure with numerous repeated low-level shocks. • A shock may result in only minor damage which may not be critical for use. However, cumulative minor damage from several shocks will eventually result in the item being unusable. • A shock may not produce immediate apparent damage but might cause the service life of the product to be shortened: the
reliability is reduced. • A shock may cause an item to become out of adjustment. For example, when a precision scientific instrument is subjected to a moderate shock, good
metrology practice may be to have it re
calibrated before further use. • Some materials such as primary high
explosives may
detonate with mechanical shock or impact. • When
glass bottles of liquid are dropped or subjected to shock, the
water hammer effect may cause
hydrodynamic glass breakage. == Considerations ==