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Definition of Eyebar
1. n. A bar with an eye at one or both ends.
Definition of Eyebar
1. Noun. (engineering construction) A straight bar, usually of metal, with a hole or "eye" at each end to allow it to be fixed to other components. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Eyebar
1. a metal bar with a loop at one or both ends [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Eyebar
Literary usage of Eyebar
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Secondary Stresses in Bridge Trusses by Carl Robert Grimm (1908)
"Some specifications require that the diameter of a pin shall not be less than
three quarters of the width of any eyebar which they connect. ..."
2. A Practical Treatise on Suspension Bridges: Their Design, Construction and by David Barnard Steinman (1922)
"eyebar Chains.—One of the first questions to be decided in the design of a
suspension bridge is the choice between a wire cable and a chain of ..."
3. A Text-book on Roofs and Bridges by Mansfield Merriman, Henry Sylvester Jacoby (1912)
"Also, the head of the largest eyebar, L\L2 must go inside of the chord at ...
The size of the eyebar head is dependent on the diameter of the pin and the ..."
4. The Elementary Principles of Mechanics by Augustus Jay Du Bois (1894)
"Let t be the thickness of plate or eyebar, and h its depth, then th is the area
of cross-section of plate or eyebar. ..."
5. International Library of Technology: A Series of Textbooks for Persons by International Textbook Company (1908)
"Next, lay off the width of the eyebar that runs from a to the right, 6 inches
wide, one-half above and one-half below the center line, and break it off ..."
6. A Manual of Engineering Specifications and Contracts, Designed as a Text by Lewis Muhlenberg Haupt (1883)
"No pin shall have a less diameter than two-thirds of the width of the widest
eyebar coming upon it. The bearing surface of any pin on chord, ..."
7. A Manual of Engineering Specifications and Contracts: Designed as a Text by Lewis Muhlenberg Haupt (1900)
"No pin shall have a less diameter than two-thirds of the width of the widest
eyebar coming upon it. The bearing surface of any pin on chord, ..."