SAITAETGrad
We manufacture honeycomb floor panels this way. The floor panels consist of aluminum skins [pre-PAA/primed], aluminum honeycomb core [PAA], film adhesive and edge potting compound.
Here's how we make them...
Per each panel drawing there is a common 'raw stock size' for both the (2) skins and the honeycomb core. In most cases there are skin thickness differences [upper VS lower] and obvious differences due to LH-RH mirror-image construction. It used-to drive the shop nuts making LH and RH panels from finish-trimmed materials.
Duhhh... then we had an idea...
We tried bonding the raw-stock skins to the raw-stock core, then routing these raw HC raw-panels to either a LH or RH configuration. Almost instantly, the idea of cutting these raw HC panels to final LH or RH trim using NC water-jet cutting [W/WO abrasives] was proposed and tested successfully. The 'GREAT CAUTION NOTE' here is that the upper-surface has to be identified so that the panels aren't inadvertently trimmed backwards [IE: MUST maintain thick-skin side UP]. Various sandwich construction test methods proved that this method worked without any deleterious effects to the panel structure [shear, t-peel, crush, etc]. Many man-hours and much 'frustration' have been saved with this method.
After water jet-cutting, the next step is to under-cut [recess-cut-out] the exposed edge HC-core by hand; and then potting the recessed HC edges with low-density potting compound [filled-epoxy] for moisture sealing and edge-crushing strength. The finished panel is then coated with epoxy primer, all-over. NOTE. The time between water-jet cutting and under-cutting the exposed HC edges, and then potting the edges, is sufficient to allow the trimmed area to be thoroughly dry long-before the potting step.
NOTE. This 'process' also works well for constant thickness crushed-core HC panels; and sandwich panels with non-metallic HC core.
Regards, Wil Taylor
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