In this discussion I'm going to be referencing the following published article: The elasticity and the tensile strength of tunica albuginea of the corpora cavernosa. - PubMed - NCBI
So let's start with the understanding of what Tensile Strength and Elasticity means:
*Tensile strength* is a measurement of the force required to pull something such as rope, wire, or a structural beam to the point where it breaks. The tensile strength of a material is the maximum amount of tensile stress that it can take before failure, for example breaking.
*Elasticity* is the ability of an object or material to resume its normal shape after being stretched or compressed; stretchiness.
I hope is that the article above will bring an understanding of these two terms as it applies to the tunica. Given that the average failure occured around the 30 lbs to 39 lbs (40 to 50 newton meters^2). Would it be smarter for us to focus on hanging (working your way up to 30-39 lbs)? Furthermore, do men who can exceed the 30-39 lbs mark 'toughen up' as they get to the point where they can lift 30-39 lbs, further increasing their tensile strength to failure? Note that this article most likely did one test on each of these 5 cadavers. There obviously couldn't be a check for tissue toughening as well. The subjects were dead so thats self-explanatory.
The last part of the article says something interesting:
*When the tissue is overstretched, the elastic fibres are destroyed and the undulating arrangement disappears*
This implies that the more and more we exceed meet the conditions for failure, the less elastic our tunica becomes (gains cementing)
So let's start with the understanding of what Tensile Strength and Elasticity means:
*Tensile strength* is a measurement of the force required to pull something such as rope, wire, or a structural beam to the point where it breaks. The tensile strength of a material is the maximum amount of tensile stress that it can take before failure, for example breaking.
*Elasticity* is the ability of an object or material to resume its normal shape after being stretched or compressed; stretchiness.
I hope is that the article above will bring an understanding of these two terms as it applies to the tunica. Given that the average failure occured around the 30 lbs to 39 lbs (40 to 50 newton meters^2). Would it be smarter for us to focus on hanging (working your way up to 30-39 lbs)? Furthermore, do men who can exceed the 30-39 lbs mark 'toughen up' as they get to the point where they can lift 30-39 lbs, further increasing their tensile strength to failure? Note that this article most likely did one test on each of these 5 cadavers. There obviously couldn't be a check for tissue toughening as well. The subjects were dead so thats self-explanatory.
The last part of the article says something interesting:
*When the tissue is overstretched, the elastic fibres are destroyed and the undulating arrangement disappears*
This implies that the more and more we exceed meet the conditions for failure, the less elastic our tunica becomes (gains cementing)