By rob 2fast4u - 7/1/2020 1:49:50 AM
Good day, I am in the planning stages of constructing a monocoque for a F1 dublicate utilizing a 1000cc motorcycle engine (gsxr/zx,cbr...) it will be producing about 3-500hp being built and turbocharged. I am working out the construction stages of building the monocoque and I will first be building a plug using pink panther insulating foam afterwards will be a 3 part split mold covering from the front to the back all the way up the middle then the upper piece will have two splits along the center line. I plan on using 8 layers of carbon with nomex 1/2" core sandwiched between them also it will have kevlar sandwiched between the two layers of carbon on either side of the core ex: C/C/K/C/C/Nomex/C/C/K/C/C. I was planing to vacuum infuse the parts separately and will have to be done in stages with the first cloth layers being done then bonding the nomex core with wet layup after that finishing it with the rest as you can't infuse resin with a honeycomb cores. My problem is how would the 3 section be finally bonded together and strengthen as it would need an overlap or additional layers where the bond would be but being a monocoque it would be difficult to reinforce it properly by the frontal area.
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By f1rob - 7/4/2020 5:17:28 PM
all the chassis I have done have been 2 part and I certainly wouldn't do a 3 part chassis (every join is a weakness) but it's up too you. several ways too join but by far the most popular is tounge an groove glue join Normally the bottom mould has the groove and the top mould the tounge as a generalization let's say we have a tub with a finnished thickness off 14mm 2mm thick skins either side off 10mm core. this is also on the premise that most tubs are oven or clave 3 stage cure. so on the bottom mould before you actually make a part you need too make a 10mm thick "spacer" ( and cure it) round the top off the mould,this needs too be offset 2cm from the mould surface and deeper than the planned depth off your groove so it can be cut too you actual groove depth. when you make the bottom off the tub you laminate the outer skins too the top off the mould an cure. you then do your core but rather than going all the way too the edge off mould you put your pre made spacer in too replace the last 30mm or so of core and cure. when you do the inner skins you lay up over the core and the spacer too lever with the top off the mould then cure after cure you remove the spacer and you have your "groove" for the "tounge" before you cure you lay up a 2cm skin on the top off the mould deeper than your "groove" and cure after cure needs trimming too the same depth as your "groove" this loose tool is fitted too the mould before you laminate and you lay you skins up over it too the top off the mould an cure when you do your core,where your loose tool is you use 6cm core not 10 as the 6cm with 2cm skins either side will give you your 10mm "tounge". once the core is cured you can do your inner skins two halfs should fit together fairly well with a bit off tweaking,you fit your bulkheads as you go and bond up all in one go
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