Randy;
You can get some ideas and information from my website http://members.cox.net/alg3/airplane.htm;
take the link to ‘Custom cowl’. I have also attached photos
of my main cooling scoop mold, and the resulting scoop. I used urethane foam
that you can by at Home Depot, or elsewhere, in 4’ x 8’ ft sheets,
2” thick and laminate together and shape. (I think it is called ‘sheathing’,
used as insulation or buffer when pouring foundations). I hard-coated by
painting on a slurry of epoxy and micro-balloon, and then apply mold release.
The number of plys of glass depends on the weight of the
cloth and the size and shape of the object. I think my scoop was mostly a
sandwich of bi-directional (BID) 8.5 oz. cloth (a Rutan cloth, PN# RA7725 from Aircraft
Spruce) on both side of a layer of 18 oz Tri-Ax cloth. I think the tri-ax
is equivalent to the knitted e-glass that Spruce sells. This combination is
equivalent in strength to about 5 plys of BID. Usually start with the
minimum number of plys you think you might need, then when the part is off the
mold you can decide if it needs more strength; add more layers of glass as
needed.
Plan your cloth sections for your mold, wet out your plys
of cloth on 2 or 4 mil plastic (drop-cloth), then put another layer of plastic
over and squeegee out the excess epoxy. I usually used the plastic Bondo
applicators you can get at your auto parts store as squeegees. Trim the
pieces to the size/shape you want, peel off the plastic on one side, lay the
cloth onto the mold, then take off the remaining plastic, and stipple into
place a remove any bubbles and wrinkles with chip brush (1 – 2” cheapo
paint brush). Overlap an inch or so where cloth sections meet.
Any time you are putting more plys over areas that are cured,
sand the surface with a 50 – 60 grit paper to get good adhesion.
Don’t be concerned if you have to make 1 or 2 cuts
to get your part off the mold – you can always glass them together again
with a couple of plays on each side.
Wetting out the glass plys basically consists of pouring a
fine stream of epoxy back and forth over the cloth; then spread evenly with
your chip brush. I find the brushes work better if you trim the bristles
about 3/8” shorter.
Fiberglass is wonderful stuff. You can make just about any
shape you want.
Good luck,
Al G.
-----Original
Message-----
From: Rotary motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf
Of randy echtinaw
Sent: Sunday, August 31, 2008 6:38 AM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Composite instruction
I
am eventually going to have to build a custom composite radiator/oil
cooler
pod ala P-51 and possibly a cowling if I cannot get aluminum to
work
around my RX-8 engine. I am looking for some good reference books
on
how to do this especially concerning making male molds - release
agents
- cloth to use - number of layers required - etc.??
My
plane is wood/tube/fabric - thought I might as well use a little
fiberglass
too :))
My
biggest concern is making them as light as possible but still
having
the needed strength and stiffness.
Thanks
--
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