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On Sep 19, 3:01 pm, Richard Riley wrote:
On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 11:18:58 -0500, "Dan Luke" wrote: "Andrew Sarangan" wrote: Fiberglass epoxy will turn into a gel at a far lower temperature, around 100C. It won't withstand boiling water? The epoxies used in homebuilts - cured at room temperature - generally start to soften around 200 degrees F. It varies with the epoxy and with what temperature any one part has been exposed to before - you can post cure many epoxies by subjecting them to higher temperatures, and get their transition temps up, by as much as 70 degrees F. The epoxies used in the 787 are cured at much higher temperatures to begin with. But this can't be too difficult for Boeing to explain. All they have to say is "our fiberglass is treated to handle as much heat as aluminum" or something similar, if that is indeed true. |
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