bcavender
Electrical
- May 31, 2018
- 103
The problem is to perform a secondary operation on a hollow and irregularly shaped CPVC shape.
The secondary opp potentially can take the CPVC shape above the temperature where it can become soft and have its shape compromised. (Performing the operation earlier in the build cycle is out of our control.)
This ideal material, possibly a powder or granular at STP, could be poured into the irregular cavity to fill it completely (as a physical internal support device would be expensive if not impossible to fab or even insert if one could be made).
At a temperature of appx 180F, this ideal material would experience a change where it would begin to build a light support matrix to support the CPVC before it goes limp and loses its shape.
Once the secondary opp is complete and both are cooled back to STP, this support material would lose its internal matrix structure and return to a powder or granular state that could simply be poured out.
This is likely a bit of a shot in the dark question as this is far afield from my expertise, but I have been impressed so many times with good ideas and suggestions from Eng-Tips I just have to run this up the pole to see if there is some possible approach that will get the job done.
All comments, alt suggestions welcome!!!
B
The secondary opp potentially can take the CPVC shape above the temperature where it can become soft and have its shape compromised. (Performing the operation earlier in the build cycle is out of our control.)
This ideal material, possibly a powder or granular at STP, could be poured into the irregular cavity to fill it completely (as a physical internal support device would be expensive if not impossible to fab or even insert if one could be made).
At a temperature of appx 180F, this ideal material would experience a change where it would begin to build a light support matrix to support the CPVC before it goes limp and loses its shape.
Once the secondary opp is complete and both are cooled back to STP, this support material would lose its internal matrix structure and return to a powder or granular state that could simply be poured out.
This is likely a bit of a shot in the dark question as this is far afield from my expertise, but I have been impressed so many times with good ideas and suggestions from Eng-Tips I just have to run this up the pole to see if there is some possible approach that will get the job done.
All comments, alt suggestions welcome!!!
B