Showing posts with label pultrusion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pultrusion. Show all posts

Saturday, February 7, 2015

More of the Same

There has been slow steady progress.  Most of the work has been on the akas and mainsheet beams and I have posted about those before.




This is the 16th and final pultrusion glue up on the beams.  Nice to have that done.



Here is a quick vid of the outer sleeve going on the second mainsheet beam.




The wet-out went on for a while to force epoxy through the sleeve.


Task time: 40 hours
Total project time: 402 hours 

Friday, January 16, 2015

Aka Wrap

Here are a couple pictures of the first layer of bidirectional carbon wrapped around an aka.  I start laying up more pultrusion tomorrow. Two more layers on each side and then it gets wrapped again.







Task time: 24 hours
Total project time: 382 hours

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Pultrusion Dispenser

I have done five pultrusion layups on the aka beams since returning.  Having run out of cut pultrusion, I had to open a new 500 foot roll.  In order to avoid the "pultrusion hairball" that I discussed in a previous post, I quickly hacked together a dispenser.  It would work better if the inner dowels actually turned, but it gets the job done.





Task time: 25 hours
Total project time: 285 hours

Friday, April 11, 2014

The Slows

I have been busy with some other projects and have only spent about 20 hours on the boat the last couple of weeks.  Tasks include more layers of uni carbon protrulsion and fairing corners of the pultrusion layers into the beam corners. The stacks of pultrusion create gaps that have to be faired before layers of bi-directional cloth can be laid over the top and bottom of the aka beams. You get glue squeeze out under the clamps and it makes for inconsistent edges.  I'm doing some test layups to see if I can find a more uniform way of doing these.  Pictures later...

I have calculated there are about 20 more carbon layups for the beams.  About 16 of these require hand clamping every six inches.

There is more information on the Cheers posters at PT Watercraft.

Task time: 20 hours
Total project time: 232 hours

Sunday, March 30, 2014

First Layer of Uni Pultrusion

Russell helped me to get the first layer of uni on yesterday.   Most of the task is preparation.

18.5 foot sections of pultrusion are cut off from the roll, cleaned, taped, sanded, vacuumed and wiped.

The first adventure was cutting the pieces off the 500 foot roll.  I was lulled into feeling safe as I cut off the cable ties that held the roll.  The roll laid there calmly. I had expected a little more reaction from releasing it.  Since it seemed under control, I neglected to add any different ties or restraint mechanism. While pulling out a length, the roll slipped off the table and exploded.  It suddenly expanded into a 15 feet wide and 10 foot high hairball.


After cutting of the first 5 strips, there was still about 400 feet of tangle.  Sorting it out was futile. I would pull out 20-30 feet and find a knot.   I will need to pull all of the aka strips and cut them.  This will consume most of the roll.

I will need to build some sort of reel with a cage for the next roll.  If you use this stuff, fair warning.

The strips were clamped to the table to measure and cut them.   This is a bit of a wrestling match.

The next step was to wipe them down with solvent.  There was dirt and a bit of adhesive from duct tape at the factory.  I used denatured alcohol.  Russell thought acetone would be much better.  Ether of these need to be sanded as they leave residues.  Apparently the gold standard is medical and/or HPLC acetone which is pure and leaves no residue.  Big time Grand Prix builds use this at over $200 a gallon.

The next step is to tape the back of the strips with packing tape to hold them together.  The tape is placed perpendicular to the strips.

Sanding was done with 150 grit paper.  Russell warned me that different paper brands and grades can leave residues on composites. I went with Festool Granat which is designed for composites.



An area that has not been sanded.  The sanding should remove all of the shiny epoxy surface without digging to far into the carbon.




Sanded Strips.

The next step is to wipe, wipe and wipe again with clean cotton until the carbon dust is gone.  I found that dust gathers between the taped strips and the unit needs to be flipped to get it out.

Why all of this cleaning?  The optimal bond is very sensitive to dust, oil (off hands) and other debris. The akas are one of the most highly loaded areas of the boat and therefore sensitive to failure from a poor bond.  Believe it or not, the wooden box of the beam could still flex along it's length before the carbon went on.  We supported the curve where the beam rose off the table with legs.  The weight of the clamps could have deflected the curve of the beam.

The beam and carbon are primed with un-thickened epoxy. Then a normal bonding batch is placed on the beam with a notched trowel.






The beam after glue up.


Clamps were placed at 6 inch intervals.  Aligning the strips in the center of the beam is an issue.  We taped the carbon down temporarily to keep it aligned.  Clamping was done from one end to the other to remove any slack and prevent bridging on the curve.

I made an attempt to make guide blocks to keep the strips aligned, but they did not turn out very well. See photo above. I did not make them big enough and they had to be glued on the rounded over corners of the box. They were not very accurate.  It would be best if there were some sort of fool proof jig for this, so you would not have to rely on aligning by eye.  The buttered pieces are also very slippery.  You have to watch that tightening clamps does not  slide the strips one way or another.


Task time: 5 hours
Total project time: 212 hours

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Slow Progress

Life got in the way and between a trip to get materials and other responsibilities not much got done for four days.

I did do some prep for the next steps on the akas.  Surface sanding and rounding over the edges.  I have also been pondering the best methods to apply layers of strips of pultrusion and 400 gsm carbon double bias.  These have to be clamped and/or vacuum bagged over the eighteen foot span.


A layer of five strips of pultrusion will look something like this only longer.





Current state of the beams.


Also got a stack of douglas fir ripped for the mainsheet beam laminations.  These were a bit wet and will need to dry with the heaters and a fan for a while.  Think I need a moisture gauge.




Task time: 8 hours
Total project time: 194 hours

Friday, March 21, 2014

Like Coffee...

Strong and Black.  Did some shopping for carbon fiber yesterday.  The cloth came from Fiberglass Supply. The pultrusion came from Goodwinds LLC.  These are both local Washington companies that supply projects world wide.  The cloth will support high load areas such as the akas, mast step, mainsheet beams, etc.  The pultrusion will replace unidirectional carbon in many places such as the akas, rudders and dagger foil.



400 gsm (12 osy) bi-directional knit.



200 gsm (6 osy) woven coth.




Pultruded flat rod.


The picture of the pultrusion shows 2000 feet in four 500 foot rolls. I have not weighed it, but is probably is about 45 pounds. Paul tells me that this is 1.5 times stronger than the same thickness of wet laminated unidirectional.  Quality is higher and more consistent.