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Real-Life Decision Making

A company that specializes in material failure analysis has hired you. Much of your work involves finding out what caused something to break. Usually that something is steel or metal. The clients need to know because they want to repair or replace the item.

For the first month, everything is going smoothly. They bring you material and you conduct a series of tests to pinpoint what the beam is made of. Then one day, you get a sample of broken beam from an old factory warehouse. You run the standard tests and the material doesn't match standard metal formulas. You test again, but still the tests are inconclusive. Unfortunately, you can't pinpoint the composition of the material. This isn't good.

You've only worked for the company a month. You really don't want to say, "I don't know what it is" to your supervising engineer. He'll wonder what sort of metallurgical technician he's hired.

You have a hunch that the material could be carbon steel built in England before the Second World War, but you're not certain. If you're right, the plant should replace existing beams because the old metal is at risk of breaking. The supervising engineer needs an answer by this afternoon.

What do you do?

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