vinhermes
Marine/Ocean
- Aug 29, 2009
- 36
Hello,
This may be a silly question for you but looking at laminate drawings for a hi-tech carbon fibre foam core boat (catamaran 30m) I have realised that when using uni directional reinforcements for local loads, the structural engineers always enclose the UD in the nominal laminate.
Basically, there is never a UD ply as outer or inner skin, it is always covered by at least a 300gsm woven roving.
Why would one do that? IS UD more prone to peeling? Is it weaker if not covered? It is just for external transverse stresses? Internal due to poisson's ratio?
Lastly, what if you keep the UD as your last ply and you come to bond something to it (maybe a bulkhead)? Would one be in trouble to do this?
Thanks by advance to lighten this. Vincent
This may be a silly question for you but looking at laminate drawings for a hi-tech carbon fibre foam core boat (catamaran 30m) I have realised that when using uni directional reinforcements for local loads, the structural engineers always enclose the UD in the nominal laminate.
Basically, there is never a UD ply as outer or inner skin, it is always covered by at least a 300gsm woven roving.
Why would one do that? IS UD more prone to peeling? Is it weaker if not covered? It is just for external transverse stresses? Internal due to poisson's ratio?
Lastly, what if you keep the UD as your last ply and you come to bond something to it (maybe a bulkhead)? Would one be in trouble to do this?
Thanks by advance to lighten this. Vincent