MartinShane
Mechanical
- Jan 14, 2013
- 59
Short form version of my question: Has anyone heard of returning an Epoxy/CF structure (That is fully cured) to its mold and heating it above the glass transition temperature of the matrix as a means of improving accuracy of the molded surface when compared to the ideal (CAD) surface?
Long form version:
After finishing school I began working for a company that specializes in composite part manufacture.
A major customer requires curved sandwich structures with tight tolerances on the inside (convex) face of the parts. Various sizes are produced, all are surface mapped using a laser tracker for comparison to customer CAD data before shipping.
(Parts are generally produced in a multi-stage assembly using single sided molds with vacuum bags which are oven or autoclave cured depending on size. Carbon fiber prepregs with nomex honeycomb core and matched core bonding adhesive is the norm.)
Because parts are fairly large, labor intensive, and relatively low volume it is critical to produce parts that pass inspection. As a result, a failing part may be reworked to try and bring it into tolerance. One particular means of correcting a part that does not meet tolerance is to return the finished part to its original mold, reapply vacuum, and heat the part above Tg for the material, and hold for an hour or more.
When I learned that this was done I was skeptical about its benefit.
When I learned that it was both endorsed by the customer and actually seems to work in some cases I was very surprised.
More than two years on, I still have not come up with an explanation for why this works that I can point to with any confidence.
I do not know if this indicates that -
-Parts in question are not fully cured to begin with due to some process variation
-Residual stresses in the laminate / sandwich structure generated during manufacturing are being released
-I understand the "Set" in thermoset less than I think I do
The couple of people in the company who I have tried to pose similar questions to either attribute it to the particular resin we use, or wonder why popcorn costs so much at baseball games.
So... has anyone seen something similar? Am I missing something obvious?
Let me have it. I can take a shaming.
Long form version:
After finishing school I began working for a company that specializes in composite part manufacture.
A major customer requires curved sandwich structures with tight tolerances on the inside (convex) face of the parts. Various sizes are produced, all are surface mapped using a laser tracker for comparison to customer CAD data before shipping.
(Parts are generally produced in a multi-stage assembly using single sided molds with vacuum bags which are oven or autoclave cured depending on size. Carbon fiber prepregs with nomex honeycomb core and matched core bonding adhesive is the norm.)
Because parts are fairly large, labor intensive, and relatively low volume it is critical to produce parts that pass inspection. As a result, a failing part may be reworked to try and bring it into tolerance. One particular means of correcting a part that does not meet tolerance is to return the finished part to its original mold, reapply vacuum, and heat the part above Tg for the material, and hold for an hour or more.
When I learned that this was done I was skeptical about its benefit.
When I learned that it was both endorsed by the customer and actually seems to work in some cases I was very surprised.
More than two years on, I still have not come up with an explanation for why this works that I can point to with any confidence.
I do not know if this indicates that -
-Parts in question are not fully cured to begin with due to some process variation
-Residual stresses in the laminate / sandwich structure generated during manufacturing are being released
-I understand the "Set" in thermoset less than I think I do
The couple of people in the company who I have tried to pose similar questions to either attribute it to the particular resin we use, or wonder why popcorn costs so much at baseball games.
So... has anyone seen something similar? Am I missing something obvious?
Let me have it. I can take a shaming.