Hi Ducks,
I'm not a professional, or an expert in composites by any means, but i do have a couple of years experience with composites, and have tried to make some tricky stuff using a variety of methods including bladed molding technique you are proposing.
At first glance, I can offer the following feed-back:
- The parts you are proposing to manufacture are very complex. The process can get very expensive very quickly if you (and you probably will) keep scrapping parts. Consider simplifying geometry as much as possible. and make things as large as possible to give yourself the best possible access.
- your 'W' section piece with 5 spigots in the lower left of your image doesn't look like it will assemble to the first 'rung' (with 3 spigots). All three spigots need to be co-linear to assemble, the inward angled spigots won't line-up until fully in-gauged (if that makes sense).
- The 4 lugs you have extending from the top surface of the tubes should be separate components bonded in place as they would be impossible to include as a feature integral to the part.
- Don't underestimate how stiff & strong the mold tools will have to be to withstand even modest pressures (do some calcs to get a feel for the resultant forces). At the very least you're mold tools would need to be machined from Alu and bolted together at regular intervals. If you intend on making you're own molds from male patterns, then i would look at an alternative process as its unlikely you would be able to make you're tools robust enough.
- Radii should be as large as possible, I would say a minimum should be R3.0mm + laminate thickness as a rough guide, but bigger will always be much better!
- Don't attempt to create you spigot shoulders by draping material across the stepped geometry. Shoulders like this should be created by the edges of the ply stack, and the spigot created by further plies (like a kind of lap-joint).
- Never assume the the bladder pressure will chase material into corners etc. - it won't. material needs to be conforming to the mold tool during lay-up, and i would de-bulk at every odd numbered ply layer (1, 3, 5 etc..).
- Tool heating? (I'm assuming prepreg here)
- finally, make sure you understand all the COSH, HAZ-MAT & Material data sheets before you start. Health and safety all the way!
All of the above assumes you are using prepreg material, based on you're proposed manufacturing process. I definitely wouldn't rule out a wet layup, which could still be consolidated under vacuum, or even vacuum infusion. I've not seen a wet lay-up with inflated bladder before, but I'm sure it has been done!
If you decide to go ahead with this then good luck!
Best wishes,
Jon