Bend radius, which is measured to the inside curvature, is the minimum radius one can bend a pipe, tube, Sheet metal, Wire rope or hose without kinking it, damaging it, or shortening its life. The smaller the bend radius, the greater the material flexibility (as the radius of curvature decreases, the curvature increases). The diagram to the right illustrates a cable with a seven-centimeter bend radius.
The minimum bend radius is the radius below which an object such as a Wire rope should not be bent.
Besides mechanical destruction, another reason why one should avoid excessive bending of fiber-optic cables is to minimize microbending and macrobending losses. Microbending causes light attenuation induced by deformation of the fiber while macrobending causes the leakage of light through the fiber cladding and this is more likely to happen where the fiber is excessively bent.
For metal tubing, bend radius is to the centerline of tubing, not the exterior.
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