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Re: (ATM) Graphite/foam tubes - help
I have only been playing with composites for the last few months, so I don't
claim to be an expert. But one book that has been immensely helpful
is Andrew C Marshall's "Composite Basics". This doesn't have an ISBN
number. I found it in the Wick's Aircraft Supply catalouge. Would be
in the Spruce catalouge too, I think, since it is oriented towards aircraft
construction.
If you are not familiar with the so-called "vacuum bagging" technique,
you will find this interesting. In a sentence, it involves putting
your layup in a bag and applying a vacuum. This serves several
purposes: it sucks up excess resin and produces a very strong, thin,
light and clean part (providing the mold was clean to start with).
As the author points out, even if you achieve only a 5 psi vacuum
(14.7 psi at sea level being the max), that is still 700 pounds/sq. foot.
The burden of finishing is then moved from filling and sanding to
preparing a clean mold.
There is at least one company that makes fabrics for vacuum bagging
(Taconic - Process Material Division, in Santa Maria, CA). But I
think that unless you're building this tube for DOD, it wouldn't pay.
Instead, I had a lot of success with tin foil and (lots of) paper towels
and 10 gallon trash bags (or construction-grade plastic sheets). For
a vacuum pump, I rigged a car gas-line to the intake of an air-compressor.
To attach the gas-line to the vacuum (i.e., trash) bag, I used rubber
gaskets (cut from an old bicycle intertube) sandwiched between hex nuts
on a threaded pipe joiner (to which the gas-line was clamped).
For of a vacuum pump, the author suggests one might get by
with a vacuum cleaner. But I don't recommend that - an air-compressor
is actually cheaper and less likely to burn out. And for a "release ply"
(the teflon-coated, perforated film that lays down directly on top of the
wet glass/epoxy - and through which the excess epoxy permeates)
he suggests plastic wrap - but the stuff I used melted from the heat of
the expoxy and left a wrinkled finish. I had better luck with aluminum
foil with lots of holes punched in it.
Okay, so much for a long-winded reply to a question that wasn't asked :(
Regarding foam materials for your core: actually balsa wood is probably
your best bet. After that, a stiff urethane (vs. PVC) foam. The
reason for balsa is that it has a high compressive strength compared
to other cores. Without that, a core doesn't really add much in my opinion
except for superfluous strength, since damping can be achieved with stiff
rings at the ends of the tube and a snug attachment to a sturdy mount.
Anyhow, if you must use a core, balsa also has better sheer strength
than most foams.
Finally, you asked about the number of layers of glass - I would use at
least two or three on each side of the core. BTW, you hear a lot about
"stippling" to force the epoxy down through the glass. A better technique
is to paint the epoxy on first and then lay the glass over it. This
eliminates a lot of air bubbles.
Hope this helps... experiment, experiment, experiment!
-Andrew Moore <alm@netcom.com>