Wedwin
Electrical
- Aug 4, 2003
- 35
Hi all!
I am a glider technician, and every weekend the gang gathers for maintainance. Every so often the question arises:
Where do cracks come from?
Some background: We have a set of wings made of glassfiber reinforced plastic (epoxy), with a gelcoat finish. The gelcoat has cracked. Not in one place only, but millions of them, lined up in parallell, in the wind direction, from root and all the way to the tip. That leads me to believe it is a chemical thing because the loads at the tip is not that great. Cracks I can believe a yard or two from the root. This glider had a refinishing job done to these particular wings just a few years ago, and gelcoat normally holds fine through many years, at least in Scandinavia.
Anyway. My training says, a crack is a crack and it grows downward and eventually into the glass. Others say a crack can not under any circumstances go from a softer material to a harder.
Being the one with the responsibility, I would like to have an explanation to give as to why it is important to catch the cracks well before too late, not only considering the costs involved.
My main area is electronics, and the materials are fitted to an airplane. So this forum could be a bit off. But have any of You a good explanation for me to give?
I am a glider technician, and every weekend the gang gathers for maintainance. Every so often the question arises:
Where do cracks come from?
Some background: We have a set of wings made of glassfiber reinforced plastic (epoxy), with a gelcoat finish. The gelcoat has cracked. Not in one place only, but millions of them, lined up in parallell, in the wind direction, from root and all the way to the tip. That leads me to believe it is a chemical thing because the loads at the tip is not that great. Cracks I can believe a yard or two from the root. This glider had a refinishing job done to these particular wings just a few years ago, and gelcoat normally holds fine through many years, at least in Scandinavia.
Anyway. My training says, a crack is a crack and it grows downward and eventually into the glass. Others say a crack can not under any circumstances go from a softer material to a harder.
Being the one with the responsibility, I would like to have an explanation to give as to why it is important to catch the cracks well before too late, not only considering the costs involved.
My main area is electronics, and the materials are fitted to an airplane. So this forum could be a bit off. But have any of You a good explanation for me to give?