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Shawn wrote:
From this site: http://www.advancedcompositetraders.com/html/news.html Fiber placement and tape laying The fiber placement process automatically places multiple individual pre-impregnated tows onto a mandrel at high speed, using a numerically controlled placement head to dispense, clamp, cut and restart each tow during placement. Minimum cut length (the shortest tow length a machine can lay down) is the essential ply-shape determinant. The fiber placement heads can be attached to a 5-axis gantry or retrofitted to a filament winder or delivered as a turnkey custom system. Machines are available with dual mandrel stations to increase productivity. Advantages of fiber place~ ment fabrication include speed, reduced material scrap and labor costs, parts consolidation and improved part-to-part uniformity. The process is employed when producing large thermoset parts with complex shapes. Tape laying is an even speedier auto~ mated process in which prepregged tape, rather than single tows, is laid down con~ continuously to form parts. It is often used for parts with highly complex contours or angles. Tape lay up is versatile, allowing breaks in the process and easy direction changes. Capital expenditures for computer-driven, automated equipment can be significant, however. Suitable for both simple and complex parts, tape laying is the current method of choice for wing skin panels on the F-22 Raptor fighter jet. As I said before, this would be farmed out to a subcontractor who's already made the capital investment, unless the glider world sees really amazing growth. Given the competing customers for production time in such facilities, I tend to doubt that "low cost" is being given much attention. But, in any case, the only way to produce future gliders for an affordable price will be through innovative manufacturing techniques... Marc |
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Marc,
I have some images of the latest concepts I can send you if you are interested. Let me know and where to send them and I will. Brad On Dec 26, 10:04*am, Marc Ramsey wrote: Shawn wrote: *From this site: http://www.advancedcompositetraders.com/html/news.html Fiber placement and tape laying The fiber placement process automatically places multiple individual pre-impregnated tows onto a mandrel at high speed, using a numerically controlled placement head to dispense, clamp, cut and restart each tow during placement. Minimum cut length (the shortest tow length a machine can lay down) is the essential ply-shape determinant. The fiber placement heads can be attached to a 5-axis gantry or retrofitted to a filament winder or delivered as a turnkey custom system. Machines are available with dual mandrel stations to increase productivity. Advantages of fiber place~ ment fabrication include speed, reduced material scrap and labor costs, parts consolidation and improved part-to-part uniformity. The process is employed when producing large thermoset parts with complex shapes. Tape laying is an even speedier auto~ mated process in which prepregged tape, rather than single tows, is laid down con~ continuously to form parts. It is often used for parts with highly complex contours or angles. Tape lay up is versatile, allowing breaks in the process and easy direction changes. Capital expenditures for computer-driven, automated equipment can be significant, however. Suitable for both simple and complex parts, tape laying is the current method of choice for wing skin panels on the F-22 Raptor fighter jet. As I said before, this would be farmed out to a subcontractor who's already made the capital investment, unless the glider world sees really amazing growth. Given the competing customers for production time in such facilities, I tend to doubt that "low cost" is being given much attention. *But, in any case, the only way to produce future gliders for an affordable price will be through innovative manufacturing techniques... Marc- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
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