rodgerc Posted Sunday at 09:33 AM Posted Sunday at 09:33 AM Can you believe that poor bloke from Canada wants to spend time on his holiday interacting with the likes of us 😳 Maybe he’ll opt for a Rhine River cruise instead. 😜 3
BrendAn Posted Sunday at 09:51 AM Posted Sunday at 09:51 AM 12 minutes ago, rodgerc said: Can you believe that poor bloke from Canada wants to spend time on his holiday interacting with the likes of us 😳 Maybe he’ll opt for a Rhine River cruise instead. 😜 I did say I have tissues if he needs one. Where else is he going to learn that Rotax engines are badly designed Or get legal advice about car racing. We have it all ,😂 4
Moneybox Posted Sunday at 02:59 PM Posted Sunday at 02:59 PM (edited) I apologise for keeping this alive but the printed part may be very useful as mould for chemically set plastics such as Kevlar, carbon fibre or fibreglass. Edited Sunday at 03:00 PM by Moneybox 2 2 1
BrendAn Posted yesterday at 12:10 AM Posted yesterday at 12:10 AM 4 hours ago, turboplanner said: Always check for sock puppets. Wish I knew what that meant. Must be a 1950s saying. 1 1
danny_galaga Posted yesterday at 12:23 AM Author Posted yesterday at 12:23 AM 9 hours ago, Moneybox said: I apologise for keeping this alive but the printed part may be very useful as mould for chemically set plastics such as Kevlar, carbon fibre or fibreglass. Agreed. You could actually lay up on it, and just let it become part of the structure. 1 1
turboplanner Posted yesterday at 02:51 AM Posted yesterday at 02:51 AM 2 hours ago, danny_galaga said: Agreed. You could actually lay up on it, and just let it become part of the structure. It could collapse and block the interior. Usual Procedure is to use a material which can be melted or collapsed inside the Carbon Fibre etc structure and extracted.
danny_galaga Posted yesterday at 03:10 AM Author Posted yesterday at 03:10 AM (edited) 19 minutes ago, turboplanner said: It could collapse and block the interior. Usual Procedure is to use a material which can be melted or collapsed inside the Carbon Fibre etc structure and extracted. If you've seen how course something like a pla print is, you'd see the resin will permanently bond to it. But if course you can do the other way and lay up INSIDE the print. Edited yesterday at 03:11 AM by danny_galaga 1
facthunter Posted yesterday at 04:24 AM Posted yesterday at 04:24 AM Plastic and combustibles should be shrouded or behind the firewall. Nev 1
turboplanner Posted yesterday at 05:52 AM Posted yesterday at 05:52 AM 1 hour ago, facthunter said: Plastic and combustibles should be shrouded or behind the firewall. Nev Agree, some should be made of aluminium of steel. Where light weight is required mig welded aluminium tube can be fast to produce and strong. Light steel tube welded or with Nickel Bronze brazing are also usually lighter than castings and both fire-proof. 3 1
danny_galaga Posted 19 hours ago Author Posted 19 hours ago 21 hours ago, facthunter said: Plastic and combustibles should be shrouded or behind the firewall. Nev Good point. I'm pretty sure I've seen fibreglass (GRP) shrouds etc in engine bays. They are combustible. But would probably burn slowly, could be why fibreglass is allowed? 1
Moneybox Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 18 minutes ago, rodgerc said: Nah that's just his lithium battery spitting the dummy.... 1 3
Blueadventures Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 1 minute ago, Moneybox said: Nah that's just his lithium battery spitting the dummy.... Fire loves consuming polyester resin 🔥 2 1
turboplanner Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago FRP is Fibreglass Reinforced Plastic i.e. a plastic reinforced by glass. There are many types of glass and many types of plastic. Fire retardant resins are used on critical applications, and I've seen it used on Shell Petrol tankers successfully in Australia. Shell agreed to it after seeing a Tanker on fire containing the boiling surface of the petrol, so not like the old FRB boat. 1
facthunter Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago And Burned carbon fibre is really hazardous.. Even small oil leaks are a big fire risk and oil mixed with Dust More so. Nev.
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