I was watching modern marvels and they were talking about carbon fiber.
So I was naturally like cool, maybe you could mold with this.
I found a website that sells carbon fiber Here
I was watching modern marvels and they were talking about carbon fiber.
So I was naturally like cool, maybe you could mold with this.
I found a website that sells carbon fiber Here
meh..not necisarily..carbon fiber is strong but i dont think its as strong as steel. or atleast the automotive application carbon fiber i know is, its def. flamable as hell to cabon fiber cars and motos are like bombs lol
meh..not necisarily..carbon fiber is strong but i dont think its as strong as steel. or atleast the automotive application carbon fiber i know is, its def. flamable as hell to cabon fiber cars and motos are like bombs lol
plus add more equipment to make it work, you'll need a vaccum pump and bag if not then the carbon fiber is pointless when theres air bubbles inbetween the sheets
You wouldn't need any special equipment. Just get carbon fiber cloth www.mashie.org
He made a computer case using carbon fiber, looks great, Its the Y2K8 Bug case. I would find you the direct link, but I'm too tired and busy. but its not difficult to find off that link
Properly laid carbon fiber composites are over ten times as strong as glassfiber composites.
Carbon fiber has ten times the specific strength of steel. This means that a one-pound piece of carbon fiber will be able to hold up ten times as much weight as a one-pound piece of steel. The major benefit is in its extremely light weight. This is why it has so many applications in the aerospace industries. If you can shoulder the weight (i.e. ships, trucks, tanks) steel is the low-cost alternative.
My local plastics supplier sells a plain-weave, non-impregnated, carbon-fiber cloth for something like $45/yd. It is about 40" wide. Done right, the armor would need two layers of carbon fiber separated by a lightweight core of some sort. It wouldn't be $1000 in materials, but it would be close.
Bear in mind, that nearly $1,000 price tag is just for the carbon fiber fabric. Not for the resin or core material you'd have to use to make it worthwile. And of course, there's a steep learning curve with this material and mistakes will be expensive.
Carbon fiber is amazing stuff. Its properties make it very attractive for lightweight structural parts. However, I think that using carbon fiber to make armor is a bit excessive. Fiberglass is more than adequate for the stresses and forces that the armor will be exposed to. The strength to weight ratio is just not needed in this application. If you have the dough to kill, though...
Carbon fiber is amazing stuff. Its properties make it very attractive for lightweight structural parts. However, I think that using carbon fiber to make armor is a bit excessive. Fiberglass is more than adequate for the stresses and forces that the armor will be exposed to. The strength to weight ratio is just not needed in this application. If you have the dough to kill, though...
we had a thread about this already, basically carbon fiber is strong when strength is applied along the fibers, but quite brittle and easily destructible if fibers aren't laid out optimally and/or force is applied orthogonal/not parallel to fibers. i think. but I'm not the pope (and therefore not infallible). it might be cool, but also slightly unrealistic.
For that Kevlar would be the preferable material. It's properties are more conducive to dealing with an impact of that magnitude. Even then, it would need to be rather thick to be able to stop anything. Fiberglass is still the best bet for Halo armor.