oompaloompa
Mechanical
- Jan 26, 2007
- 29
Hello everyone. I'm new to the composites world but have great interest in the manufacture of carbon fiber parts. I was hoping to supplement my internet research and short amount of time experimenting, with some knowledge from the experts here. This is a hobby project for me, but I do have a BSME, so I'm not completely useless, I hope.
To start, I've been doing hand layups, mostly overlays (skimming/skinning) of some automotive interior parts from my car. I use an adhesive spray on the part, and gently attempt to wrap the part in 5.7 oz 2x2 3k carbon twill.
I've got some West 105 with the clear hardener, that I've been "painting" on with brushes. This works fine, except that the resin is so thin, it requires multiple coats (4-5) with wet sanding in between coats to help level it out. It is time consuming.
I've experimented with vacuum bagging (moldless) the setup to minimize the epoxy usage, save time, and compact the carbon twill for a nicer part. That results in wrinkles on the surface, depending on shape complexity, despite using peel ply, and two layers of breather. I end up sanding these down and adding a few layers of epoxy. Overall not bad, but not a perfect part either.
These parts are mostly one-shot parts, which is why I haven't made molds for them. Is there a better way to do this? Should I be thickening the epoxy to eliminate the extra coats? Skipping the bagging process unless I'm using molds?
Bonus question: I did make a urethane female mold of one part. It came out great, however the bag side came out pretty rough. Is it typical to make a silicone plug for that side if I need a nice surface? I think a two part mold (M-F) might be overkill.
Any thoughts are greatly appreciated, and thanks in advance.
Michael
To start, I've been doing hand layups, mostly overlays (skimming/skinning) of some automotive interior parts from my car. I use an adhesive spray on the part, and gently attempt to wrap the part in 5.7 oz 2x2 3k carbon twill.
I've got some West 105 with the clear hardener, that I've been "painting" on with brushes. This works fine, except that the resin is so thin, it requires multiple coats (4-5) with wet sanding in between coats to help level it out. It is time consuming.
I've experimented with vacuum bagging (moldless) the setup to minimize the epoxy usage, save time, and compact the carbon twill for a nicer part. That results in wrinkles on the surface, depending on shape complexity, despite using peel ply, and two layers of breather. I end up sanding these down and adding a few layers of epoxy. Overall not bad, but not a perfect part either.
These parts are mostly one-shot parts, which is why I haven't made molds for them. Is there a better way to do this? Should I be thickening the epoxy to eliminate the extra coats? Skipping the bagging process unless I'm using molds?
Bonus question: I did make a urethane female mold of one part. It came out great, however the bag side came out pretty rough. Is it typical to make a silicone plug for that side if I need a nice surface? I think a two part mold (M-F) might be overkill.
Any thoughts are greatly appreciated, and thanks in advance.
Michael