carbongr
Materials
- Jul 16, 2007
- 30
After a test we did to a part we manufacture, we discovered that when applying constant force to a certain point the deflection gets an initial value, which slowly increases in respect of time and gets its max value after about5 minutes.
We did the same test to another identical part (but made from another manufacturer), which had its maximum deflection immediately after applying the same force at the same point.
Worth mentioning that the initial deflection of our part was 1mm less than the other part, but the final was 1mm more.
Another clue is that these two parts do sound differently when you hit them with a small metal piece (i.e. a small hammer). The one from the other manufacturer sounds brittle (like hitting porcelain or glass) when our sounds more like plastic. Our part vibrates much more when it hits the ground from a certain height too.
Is these caused due the probably different epoxy resin we use, or is it due to different Carbon/Epoxy ratio (we use 68% carbon fibre in this particular part)?
P.S. the pars are solid rods.
Thank you very much in advance.
We did the same test to another identical part (but made from another manufacturer), which had its maximum deflection immediately after applying the same force at the same point.
Worth mentioning that the initial deflection of our part was 1mm less than the other part, but the final was 1mm more.
Another clue is that these two parts do sound differently when you hit them with a small metal piece (i.e. a small hammer). The one from the other manufacturer sounds brittle (like hitting porcelain or glass) when our sounds more like plastic. Our part vibrates much more when it hits the ground from a certain height too.
Is these caused due the probably different epoxy resin we use, or is it due to different Carbon/Epoxy ratio (we use 68% carbon fibre in this particular part)?
P.S. the pars are solid rods.
Thank you very much in advance.