Friday, January 1, 2010

Adventures in Composites

The big thing that we learned in this episode is how to manage holes or penetrations. We made a male mold and were trying to decide how to mark and spot where we wanted to make penetrations called for in the fuselage.Marking the fabric was not particularly accurate, but it did work. The real answer that we saw was to make a potrusion where the penetration was.

It is easier to cut off a piece that sticks out past the piece that you want than it is to dig out material where you do not want it. Our design has four or so penetrations into the fuselage. Additional wedges of blue insulation were hacked to fit into the holes. They were not made to perfectly match, but were close. So you could easily see what you wanted to keep and cut.

Another interesting thing that we learned was the relative softness of home-owner classes of epoxy. Be aware of this. Y, is that any feature that looks liou can make a mess of your piece if you heat it too much to melt the wax. You have to pull the piece free form the molds and set them back down once the part is free. Putting it back down to the mold really helped the part retain its shape. As we pulled our parts off, we were concerned that they would not be square when we put the parts back together.

Due to some communications issues, there were some delaminations in areas that would have been better had they not occured. These anomalies were healed by forcing a needle into the void and using a syringe to fill it with epoxy. Epoxy is viscous, be aware that it is tough to dispense through a narrow needle. Voids were filled until it appeared to be full visually, pockets were no longer hollow appearing.

Molds seem to be effected strongly by Murphy's Law. Everything that could have gone wrong with our parts did. Our shape has several bays. Bays are hollows where square sides would be best. The bay that we took the time to box in with plywood came out well. The bays that had no boxing in had delaminations and other issues such as corner delaminations, non-square lay ups and twists where pieces hung on something and were not carefully managed back into place. In a bay, is the only area that we had any mold damage. It was due to pieces of cloth almost wrapping a narrow piece of mold. Had it been boxed in, the pieces would not have been able to wrap the way they did and pin the mold into place. This damage was minimal and was fixed with filling the cracks with glue and for the most part was a non-issue.