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Talk:Tenacity (textile strength)

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what does quasi dimensionless mean? Arent the dimensions g / denier = g / (g/m) = meters?

74.109.213.249 (talk) 13:58, 2 December 2015 (UTC)I think the units are N m/kg (tensile strength is in Newtons and deiner is in kilograms per meter) or, simplified m^2 s^-2, it can be expressed in Sieverts.[reply]

Merge The two are the same thing; both are the tensile strength times the length divided by the mass. Also, the speedy keep was due to the nomination being a merge, merges do not require AfD. "Quasi-dimensionless" is a confusing term which does not have much meaning. This should be turned into a section in specific strength and this page should be redirected to that section. Also, the article is a stub.--74.109.213.249 (talk) 04:23, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]