scrimshaw
Mechanical
- Dec 19, 2006
- 42
Hi
I am trying to wade through some hype on a product called foam-seal which some people are saying increases chassis stiffness by a huge amount. (i've heard claims of up too 300% in some cases!!)
The product is a 2 part polyurethane foam which is injected into the rails, expands, fills all the voids then hardens. Even the conservative estimate was I believe 30% more stiffness for the lowest density foam (2lbs/ft^3).
I understand the principles behind a foam core in a sandwich laminate and I suppose it works the same way, but I have a few reservations.
First I would think the foam must adhere completely to all sides of the walls for it to be any benefit and I am wondering how the foam can do this in metal that has been enclosed for possibly years and is not prepped?
Second if used in say 2"x6" rect. tube steel with a wall thickness of 0.125" and a length of 10 feet can any usefull stiffness increase be expected assuming good adhesion on all sides?
Thanks for any help you can offer.
I am trying to wade through some hype on a product called foam-seal which some people are saying increases chassis stiffness by a huge amount. (i've heard claims of up too 300% in some cases!!)
The product is a 2 part polyurethane foam which is injected into the rails, expands, fills all the voids then hardens. Even the conservative estimate was I believe 30% more stiffness for the lowest density foam (2lbs/ft^3).
I understand the principles behind a foam core in a sandwich laminate and I suppose it works the same way, but I have a few reservations.
First I would think the foam must adhere completely to all sides of the walls for it to be any benefit and I am wondering how the foam can do this in metal that has been enclosed for possibly years and is not prepped?
Second if used in say 2"x6" rect. tube steel with a wall thickness of 0.125" and a length of 10 feet can any usefull stiffness increase be expected assuming good adhesion on all sides?
Thanks for any help you can offer.