Help understanding how to work with prepreg
On Wed, 31 Mar 2004 19:32:31 -0700, "Joe Wilding"
wrote:
I have a little professional composite aircraft experience, so here goes.
First of all, prepregs do not have to be autoclave cured. There have been a
lot of prepreg resin systems developed in the last 10 years that work very
well under just vacuum pressure and oven cure. This is ussually a MUCH
cheaper way to process the material, with nearly the same performance.
very true, just depends on what "performance" means for your
application
Now to actually answer your question. Honeycomb holds up just fine in an
autoclave. Honeycomb is VERY stiff in the thickness direction., and not very
stiff n the edgewise direction. The key to getting autoclaved honeycomb
parts turn out good it to put a very gradual core bevel on the edges. (3 to
1 or more)
yep, this is done quite often
This keeps the edges stable and keeps them from pushing in. If
you can keep the edges stable, the core won't crush. The crushing stress of
core is somthing like several thousand psi. Most autoclaves only apply 50 or
100 psi.
By the way, there are many high temp foams available as well that are oven
or autoclave compatible. Foams are generally less stiff in the thickness
direction (for the same density core), but they are homogenous, so they have
much better in plane stiffness. So they are a trade off.
So you're saying there's a foam that gives a better in-plane (shear)
stiffenss than alu honeycomb for a given density? I'd be interested in
knowing what foam this is.... alu honeycomb is great structurally
but it's expensive do you have any links to foam products?
They are easier to
get a good part without the edges pushing in, but they are less stiff in the
directions you really care about once the part is cures, which means they
are not quite as strong for a given weight.
I hope this helps.
Joe Wilding
"Chris" wrote in message
. com...
Hi everyone,
I'm just trying to educate myself about composite construction
techniques, and I'm a little confused on the process of using prepreg
materials in an autoclave. Could someone who has done this help me
understand the process?
Assuming I have prepreg cloth and access to a large autoclave and I
want to make a part, say a seat for lack of a better example, what
would I use for core material, and how do I keep it from getting
crushed in the autoclave? Typical foam that I am familiar with will
melt under the 250F curing temperatures, and it seems that a core like
Nomex honeycomb will be crushed when the pressure is applied. I can
imagine how to do a mold, but it seems like any core material will
come out a molten, flattened mess.
Can someone help out a novice understand how this is done? What do the
big boys do when they want to make a high temperature part? I'm having
trouble visulizing how this actually works.
Thanks for educating me. This is just for my own enjoyment and
edification, but alot of people I've asked have the same question.
Chris
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