HOW
TO RECOGNIZE SUB-STANDARD CARBON FIBER
Recently
we have seen an increase in "carbon fiber" sheets and
other products for sale in stores as well as on the web. Since
the knowledge of composites and it's use is still relatively
minor, we would like to give some information to the consumer
so you may be aware of some of the sub-standard product that
are presented as carbon fiber.
We
purchased on-line a sheet of flat "carbon fiber" stock.
Below is an inspection and photos of what was received.
While the dimensions were correct at 2.0" x
14.0" x 1/8" thick, the thickness tolerance was 0.041".
While this is acceptable for a sheet of plywood, it is not for
a fabricated composite sheet. We also found that we did not receive
flat stock either, this piece bowed up in the middle by 1/8" and
had a 1/8" opposing corner twist to it. Good thing we were
not going to try and use it for any project.
The
breakdown of the construction of thie piece is one layer of
an unknown 3K plain weave fabric bonded to approximately two
layers of chop fiberglass mat (chop fiberglass mat is the cheapest
composite material available) with a black fiberglass veil
as a backing, all bonded with polyester resin (polyester resin
is the cheapest lowest grade resin available). The conclusion
is that while there is one carbon fiber layer in the part,
it does not have any other properties associated with it such
as high strength and low weight or have any tight manufacturing
tolerances.
The conclusion is that the piece we received was not quite carbon fiber,
just a sub-standard product made to fool consumers thinking they were
purchasing real carbon fiber.
DON'T
BE FOOLED!
|