T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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415.1 | I just want a straignt stiff spar... | K::FISHER | Kick the tires, light the fires, and GO! | Wed Dec 28 1988 13:30 | 27 |
| Glass has a big advantage over carbon fiber - I've got some!
> Putting a strip of glass between two strips of balsa does
> very little to stiffen the spar. To stiffen it you add material
> of little stretch on the top and bottom of the lamination. This
> could be anything that has a lot of shear strength and little
> elasticity: hardwood, glass, carbon fiber, etc.. Watch out for
> materials with no elasticity, they may crack on a severe landing.
Anker your argument doesn't seem to be based on fact - I've seen some articles
about glider wings that laminates carbon fiber between the wood. Why should
it be better to put it on top and bottom? Also several expertly build
wings have a single layer of carbon fiber on one end (top or bottom) of
a spar. Some builders only carbon fiber the top spar or the bottom spar.
It would appear that the experts only know that carbon fiber adds strength
and that they don't know the optimal way to apply it. Or maybe it really
just does add strength and the method of application has little effect
on the results.
Soooooooo let me put my question in another way. Can thin Fiberglas
laminated to balsa spars add significant strength and/or rigidity?
Bye --+--
Kay R. Fisher |
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415.2 | Lots of ways to stiffen them if you want to | TYCHO::REITH | | Wed Dec 28 1988 13:43 | 11 |
| Re: .58
Sandwiching it in the spar will add strength without adding rigidty.
You don't want rigid glider wings, you want them flexible. Just look at
a glider going up a hi-start with it's wingtips pointing away from the
tow... To make the spar more rigid you want it top AND bottom. I always
liked using glass for stiffness but you need to get it on evenly so you
don't have weak spots. I would thing you could do the same thing by
putting hard 1/16th" balsa upright between/across the spars with the
grain going top to bottom (spar to spar). I've built several models that
have called for this and it always helped on my CL combat planes.
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415.3 | Carbon Fiber, there is no substitute | LEDS::COHEN | | Wed Dec 28 1988 14:14 | 30 |
|
I use CF tape on the bottom of the spar in the wing of my big
electric glider. I did this because I had a wing fold while
pulling out of a dive on an earlier version. The net effect of
adding the Carbon Fiber is the same as when you add something like
nylon tape to the bottom of a foam wing on a plane like a Scooter.
You are forcing the upper part of the spar to take a compression
load when the spar bends, but the lower part of the spar is
releived of the expansion load by the CF, which is bonded to the
spar and incapable of stretching. The advantage is, of
course, that the wooden spar can withstand a much higher
compression load than it can an expansion, and so the spar
survives higher stress levels without breaking.
The spar becomes even stronger when you laminate some CF to the
top too, since now, the CF resists bending moments in both the
upward and downward directions.
Laminating some CF between two spars is an inbetween alternative
to the top and bottom method. The spar on top of the laminated CF
is strenghtened when the ends of the spar are pushed upward, much
like a spar with a single laminate along its bottom, and the spar
on the bottom is strengthened in the opposite direction.
CF is easy to apply, I just use CA to glue it down, it adds little
weight (20 ft of the stuff probably doesn't even weigh an ounce),
takes up next to no room (so you don't have to rework all of your
wing ribs a lot to accomodate the lamination on the spar), and
makes a noticable difference in strength. I recommend it. It is
much more suitable than fiberglass for reenforcing spars.
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415.6 | carbon fiber tow from Tower | LEDS::COHEN | | Thu Dec 29 1988 10:45 | 30 |
|
Tower sells someones Carbon Fiber tape. I can't remeber the Man.,
but if youcan't find it, lemme know and I'll go home and dig the
original package out of my building stuff. Basiclly (how do you
spell that word, anyway?) It comes as a one inch wide "tape",
about 6 feet long, wrapped around a 5 or 6 inch long piece of
cardboard. The "Tape" is actually just a *P_SSLOAD* of wicked
thin strands (like hair size, or smaller, even) kind of jumbled
together so that they form a coherent mass thats, like I said,
about an inch wide, and maybe a 16th thick, by 6 feet long.
You open the package, unwrap the tape to its full length, and
separate however much you want to use from the edge of the bundle.
You wre-wrap whats left, and then glue down the chuck you removed
from the whole. You don't need all that much, as you can confirm
to yourself by taking something like a 1/16th bundle of strands
and trying to break them by pulling (you will find it quite
difficult, if not impossible).
With the CF tape, you don't really need to be as careful as you do
with the CF composite pieces (the ones that are a solid piece like
a piece of balsa stock, rather than what I'm describing, which is
loosely bundled hair-like strands). The composites often splinter
when you cut them. The splinters, which have been known to fly
about when they break free, are quite small, very sharp, and
incredibly strong, and so really necessitate the use of gloves and
saftey goggles to ensure no unfortunate mishaps (if you get a
splinter in your finger, you'll never be able to get it out with
tweezers, and it will cause a lot of irritation, if you get one in
your eye, the results could be considerably less pleasnat.
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415.7 | Tom's has CF tape | ROCK::MINER | Electric = No more glow-glop | Thu Jan 05 1989 13:18 | 3 |
| I bought some carbon fiber tape at Tom's Hobby Korner in Chelmsford.
- Dan Miner
|
415.15 | Let's Have an Update - Plastic or Carbon? | CIVIC::MARRONE | | Fri May 03 1991 13:38 | 21 |
| Well, it's been a while now, and we haven't heard the final verdict.
Is this tape found at the loading dock the real thing or not? Maybe we
haven't been hearing anything because indeed it really IS carbon fibre
and those involved have gone underground to protect their "free" source
of this stuff ;-}. Just kidding.
But please let us know one way or the other.
Incidentally, an earlier note suggested that even using a plastic or
nylon tape on top/bottom of spars can be better than the raw spar.
I've been tempted to try using some nylon tape myself, but it would not
adhere with CA glue, and I've been too busy to try a sample with epoxy.
Has anyone else done this, and if so, what are the results?
As far as CF is concerned, I just bought a 1"x24" piece from Tower in
the $4-5 range. I had a sample from Aerospace Composits (not sure of
company name) and it works great for repairs of spars and fuse sides
and other high-stress areas.
Regards,
Joe
|
415.16 | Don't use nylon | MR4DEC::ANKER | Anker Berg-Sonne | Fri May 03 1991 13:57 | 9 |
| Re: <<< Note 415.15 by CIVIC::MARRONE >>>
Joe,
Nylon is totally useless for this purpose because it
stretches. The whole point is that the reinforcing tape prevents
the spar from bending to the point where the wood pulls apart.
Anker
|
415.17 | CF reinforced spars..not always needed. | ELMAGO::TTOMBAUGH | A Fistful of Epoxy | Fri May 03 1991 14:28 | 25 |
| I can categorically state that the packing/strapping tape is not
carbon fiber. It is some sort of plastic, polyethelene, PVC, or
related material.
I would hate to think of the cost of using CF as strapping tape,
as well as the lacerated hands from handling it.
Using CF as spar reinforcement is only as good as the glue joint.
I've seen crashes where the CF pulled cleanly away from the spar
without even taking any wood with it. It obviously contributed little
or nothing to the overall spar strength.
Another way to reinforce spars is to wrap them with Kevlar cord.
This may be impractical on certain types of foam wing structures,
but if the entire spar assembly is completed before installing in
the wing, then it's feasible.
Edmonds Scientific sells a large roll, ~700 ft., of small diameter
Kevlar cord at a reasonable price, ~$10-15, that is good for wrapping
purposes.
Wrap it around the spar spacing each wrap ~1/8" apart, then hit
it with thin CA. That portion of the spar will be intact long after
the rest of the plane has disintegrated.
Terry
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415.18 | Sticker shock! | ZENDIA::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02 | Fri May 03 1991 14:42 | 11 |
| Kay got a sample of the stuff from the guy in the base note and we
checked it out at one of our lunchtime sessions. It seems to be some
type of plastic coated braid but we couldn't tell what it was. Probably
nylon or another plastic. It was very strong and stretch resistant but
I didn't feel comfortable with it as a CF replacement.
I just bought a 2"x48" piece of carbon fiber strip and almost died when
it rang up as $15+ at Tom's. I hadn't paid attention to the prices in
the magazines. My previous CF was the Dave Brown "horsehair". I thought
the ribbon would be better (read "more uniform") under fiberglass when
vacuum bagging so I picked it up.
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415.30 | | N25480::FRIEDRICHS | Keep'm straight n level | Thu May 23 1991 16:27 | 10 |
| Carbon fiber tip to tip on the bottom of the spar.... That broke too..
Speaking of which, Ken B (the CD from the contest) told Mike Stains
that C.F. is only good in compression... He says that you should run
the C.F. on the top of the top spare, not the bottom of the bottom
spare.... I find that very hard to believe... Anyone care to
dispute it??
jeff
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415.31 | Both sides allows you to pull negative Gs also | ZENDIA::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02 | Thu May 23 1991 16:43 | 5 |
| I've heard that also. My general plan is to use it on both sides. Might
want to fly inverted to lose some altitude.
My S3014 Gnome foam wing (say that three times fast) just had CF on the
bottom and failed by compressing the foam (and folding the wing)
|
415.32 | 2 pieces of carbon needed | POBOX::KAPLOW | Set the WAYBACK machine for 1982 | Thu May 23 1991 20:01 | 8 |
| re: .233
One piece of CF is pretty weak. Two, with something between them
form a VERY rigid I beam structure. The "something" can be foam,
balsa (end grain shear webbing would be best), spruce, or
whatever. Failure of this structure usually comes from destroying
the something in between, not from the breaking of the carbon
fiber.
|
415.24 | *Vertical* CF laminate in built-up wings? | ZENDIA::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02 | Mon Jun 03 1991 10:34 | 19 |
| I'm about to build another built-up wing. I'm going to use the CF
laminate on the spars. The wing will be a "D" tube design. I'm playing
with ideas for the CF on the spars. The June 91 MAN had a section on
using vertical CF laminate as spars in foam wings. This got me thinking
about the following design:
bbbbbbbCssWbbbbbbb b = 1/16" balsa
^ CssW ^ C = Carbon Fiber lam.
| W | W = Ver. grain shear web
leading edge sheet + W + Cap strips s = 1/4" sq balsa spar
v CssW v
bbbbbbbCssWbbbbbbb
Trying to bend CF laminate widthwise should be stiff enough for
launches. How would this compare to using the same laminate on the
inner (or top AND bottom) spar surfaces?
|
415.25 | Build strong now, repent less later | ELMAGO::TTOMBAUGH | A Fistful of Epoxy | Mon Jun 03 1991 11:10 | 33 |
| Jim,
Based on the way most successful spar structures are being built
now, I'd say your layout would work if you're looking for the absolute
lightest structure but the one thing that will kill you is the balsa
spars.
You're asking the CF and the shear webs to take nearly all the load.
Even 1/4" balsa is so much lower in tension or compression strength
that it's only along for the ride.
I suspect what would happen in failure mode is that the CF would
buckle forward or aft, away from the spar, and blooie!
If you substituted 1/8" X 3/8" spruce for the balsa, you'd have
more strength and more ability for flexing before failure.
Here's a cross section of the Legend spar in the center 8" of the
wing:
c = .007 CF
ccc
xsssx s = 1/8" X 3/8" spruce
xpppx
xpppx p = 3/8" X 1/2" ply
xpppx
xsssx x = 1/16" x 3/4" ply
ccc
Everything runs full span on the center spar, ~40", except the 3/8"
ply is replaced by 3/8" balsa vert. grain, between the spars, outboard
of the center 8".
The whole assembly weighs 142 grams, 5 oz., and would make a nice
baseball bat.
But it can live under a full bore winch launch with no visible flexing.
Terry
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415.26 | Tip is sideways | KAY::FISHER | Stop and smell the balsa. | Mon Jun 03 1991 11:50 | 17 |
| > Trying to bend CF laminate widthwise should be stiff enough for
> launches. How would this compare to using the same laminate on the
> inner (or top AND bottom) spar surfaces?
I'll add some controversy since I already told Jim the following:
You don't want to stop it from bending (how else do you measure stress
on tow) what you want to do is stop it from breaking.
Stick with the carbon fiber on the top spar.
OK - ready for rebuttals.
Bye --+--
Kay R. Fisher |
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415.27 | Next iteration | ZENDIA::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02 | Mon Jun 03 1991 12:26 | 24 |
| Ok, back into the shop and check out the supplies... I've got some
1/8"x3/16" spruce, some 3/16" square, and some 1/8" square left from my
last bulk buy. I'll put this into perspective. This is a 2 meter
replacement wing for my GL. Different airfoil (S3021) since I saw how
well a S3021 did this weekend in iffy conditions. How about this:
ss cc
cc ss c = CF laminate
bb bb s = 1/8"x3/16" spruce spars
bb or bb b = 3/16" vertical grain shear web
bb bb
cc ss
ss cc
I like the CF on top and bottom since I have been known to fly inverted
to get down (with flaps extended it's a fast alternative but looks
funky). Is it better to put the CF inside the spar sandwich or on the
outside? I'll go with 1/16" ply dihedral braces on both sides and only
sheet the leading edge of the wing
BTW: Jim Tyrie broke his Falcon 880 wings on the winch yesterday
BECAUSE he went to the "can't bend" wing rods. He was bending the
old ones on every flight. He didn't bend the rods but the force that
they were taking bent the wings outward from the wing rod tubes.
|
415.28 | | ELMAGO::TTOMBAUGH | A Fistful of Epoxy | Mon Jun 03 1991 12:41 | 12 |
| re .814
Jim,
The version on the right should work fine for a 2 meter wing.
It's easier to put the CF on the outside, and avoids the possibility
of building a wavy spar. Strength wise, outside is just as good
if your careful to get an even glue coat over ALL the bonding surface
of the CF. Use slow set CA and press the spar down against the bench
until the CA cures.
Terry
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415.29 | Sort of like a bow limb... | TLE::SASAKI | Marty Sasaki ZK02-3N30 381-0151 | Mon Jun 03 1991 12:44 | 21 |
| Look at the limb of a modern laminated bow. What you find are two
layers of fiberglass or graphite, laminated to the top and bottom of a
piece of wood. When the bow string is pulled back, one side of the bow
limbs are stretched, and the other sides are compressed. The center is
there just to hold the two sides in the proper relationship to each
other.
When a bow limb breaks, it is usually because the limb becomes
delaminated, either the glue bond breaks down, or the wood between the
two layers of fiberglass/graphite sheers apart.
The same kind of forces are exerted on a wing spar. If you could build
a spar with carbon on the top and bottom, and fill the space in the
middle with a material that could be bonded well to the carbon and that
has good sheer strength, then you could build an almost unbreakable
wing.
I don't have enough experience building models to tell you how to do
this.
Marty Sasaki
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415.20 | cutting the laminate into other shapes | ELMAGO::TTOMBAUGH | A Fistful of Epoxy | Mon Jun 03 1991 16:41 | 11 |
| I wouldn't attempt the scroll saw bit unless you have some way to
maintain a perfectly straight feed, down the entire length of the
strip, AND wear a nose mask.
The best , but tedious way, is to tape a long metal straight edge
on top of the CF strip, then repeatedly and lightly score the surface
with a single edge razor blade or X-acto, until it's cut through.
.007 shouldn't be too bad. I've done it with .14 ". Wear a mask
and look out for splinters.
Terry
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415.23 | watch out for splinters regardless of method! | POBOX::KAPLOW | Set the WAYBACK machine for 1982 | Mon Jun 03 1991 19:32 | 3 |
| I sometimes use a balsa stripper to cut CF strips. Another
favorite is my old darkroom paper cutter - it works real well on
CF.
|
415.33 | conventional spars for a foam wing | ABACUS::RYDER | perpetually the bewildered beginner | Sun Sep 15 1991 08:31 | 30 |
| LeRoy Satterlee, the soaring columnist for RC Report and the
re-designer of the Chuperosa, has an excellent article on building
spars for foam wings in the October '91 issue, page 98. This article
alone earns the price of the issue. I now assume that the spars in the
Chuperosa kit are his design. (The pre-RCM-article Chup had a built-up
wing.)
The Chup kit uses the foam as the shear web. Flat spruce spars are
glued to the top and bottom of the web, and then the foam is slit fore
and aft for the dihedral brace. The design is very, very strong.
Several of us consider this wing to be almost bullet proof.
The article in RC Report deals with the fabrication of conventional,
thickness-of-the-wing spar structures for insertion into a foam wing.
The problems he addresses are: 1) building the spar with the correct
thickness and taper and 2) jigging the insertion process. He also
discusses the structure for wing rods, but that is incidental and, in
my opinion, not as well thought out. As for carbon, he recommends
putting it on the bottom of the top spruce and the bottom of the bottom
spruce.
The fabrication process would apply even to kits that do not anticipate
spars. He cuts out a top-to-bottom slot **and saves the scrap**. The
scrap is then laid on its side on a building board and sandwiched
between two straight edges of the same thickness. Then the scrap is
removed, leaving the straight edges as a form for building the spar.
Note that this technique could be slightly modified to apply to wings
that were not to be straight (e.g. the Hobie Hawk's) or uniform taper.
The jigging is utterly trivial; he uses the foam core beds.
|