garehan
Mechanical
- Oct 21, 2007
- 9
Guys, I have been fiddling around with composites for a while and I keep running into the same problems, despite changes in technique.
Let me explain what I'm doing right now. I'm laying 3 layers 6oz/yd^2 twill weave carbon fiber into a silicone mold that's about 6"x20" and 1/4" deep. It is a female mold. There is about a 1/8" radius at the edges of this "box." I trim the carbon fiber so that it is just the right size to fit into the box, the fabric is less than 1/8" larger than what the finished part will be. I am not using a gel coat, as I've found that when gel coat comes into contact with the silicone mold, it will never dry, even when removed from the mold. After I lay a layer of the carbon fiber, I wet it out with epoxy and a foam brush. Once all three layers are applied and a generous final layer of epoxy is added. Then I apply an over-sized piece of perforated peel-ply, followed by an over-sized piece of felt. I place the mold, carbon, etc into a stretchlon vacuum bag. I then run my vacuum hose into the bag and bridge the gap between the hose and the bleeder felt with a piece of resin infusion matrix. Finally, I seal the bag and pull approximately 12psi of vacuum (or 25 inHG as per the gauge I've placed on the pump I built). The epoxy I am using is listed on fiberglast's site as "20 minute cure time," but I suspect that that is based on autoclave curing, because I notice about a 2hr cure time (and yes, I'm sure my mixture ratio is correct). I wait about 24 hours and remove the part from the bag.
Now the problem...
At the edges of my mold, where I mentioned the 1/8" radius, I often get voids where the carbon fiber has not laid flat against the mold. I got rid of most of this problem by cutting the fabric to nearly its finished size, before laying up the part, but I till see the voids in several places, just a bit smaller. I also occasionally get voids on the flat surface of the mold. I have tried using excess resin, I have tried massaging the wet layup thoroughly before vacuum bagging, I have tried massaging the layup while under vacuum. None of these methods have gotten rid of the voids. Below are some pictures of the voids on my most recent piece.
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Does anyone have any ideas about what I could do to avoid these flaws? I tried resin infusion, but that got rid of the big voids at the cost of many many small ones throughout the part. I was thinking perhaps a wet layup followed by perforated peel-ply and resin infusion matrix(instead of bleeder felt) might help get rid of the air bubbles, but that's just a hunch.
I'd love to hear the pro's opinions.
thanks for your help,
russ
Let me explain what I'm doing right now. I'm laying 3 layers 6oz/yd^2 twill weave carbon fiber into a silicone mold that's about 6"x20" and 1/4" deep. It is a female mold. There is about a 1/8" radius at the edges of this "box." I trim the carbon fiber so that it is just the right size to fit into the box, the fabric is less than 1/8" larger than what the finished part will be. I am not using a gel coat, as I've found that when gel coat comes into contact with the silicone mold, it will never dry, even when removed from the mold. After I lay a layer of the carbon fiber, I wet it out with epoxy and a foam brush. Once all three layers are applied and a generous final layer of epoxy is added. Then I apply an over-sized piece of perforated peel-ply, followed by an over-sized piece of felt. I place the mold, carbon, etc into a stretchlon vacuum bag. I then run my vacuum hose into the bag and bridge the gap between the hose and the bleeder felt with a piece of resin infusion matrix. Finally, I seal the bag and pull approximately 12psi of vacuum (or 25 inHG as per the gauge I've placed on the pump I built). The epoxy I am using is listed on fiberglast's site as "20 minute cure time," but I suspect that that is based on autoclave curing, because I notice about a 2hr cure time (and yes, I'm sure my mixture ratio is correct). I wait about 24 hours and remove the part from the bag.
Now the problem...
At the edges of my mold, where I mentioned the 1/8" radius, I often get voids where the carbon fiber has not laid flat against the mold. I got rid of most of this problem by cutting the fabric to nearly its finished size, before laying up the part, but I till see the voids in several places, just a bit smaller. I also occasionally get voids on the flat surface of the mold. I have tried using excess resin, I have tried massaging the wet layup thoroughly before vacuum bagging, I have tried massaging the layup while under vacuum. None of these methods have gotten rid of the voids. Below are some pictures of the voids on my most recent piece.




Does anyone have any ideas about what I could do to avoid these flaws? I tried resin infusion, but that got rid of the big voids at the cost of many many small ones throughout the part. I was thinking perhaps a wet layup followed by perforated peel-ply and resin infusion matrix(instead of bleeder felt) might help get rid of the air bubbles, but that's just a hunch.
I'd love to hear the pro's opinions.
thanks for your help,
russ