Hi Folks,
Thanks for the feedback.
One suggestion, to make things easy for the novices, would be to explain in one sentance what each material does as you introduce each stage of the process. Most of it is covered or self explanatory but one that stood out is the breather cloth. Its obvious once you get down to the vacuuming part of the guide that it facilitates air flow. however those new to composites or with only wet lay experience might be wondering what its for until that point.
I'll have a look into this. I was planning on putting a 'glossary of terms' in but they always go at the back and I'm not sure whether anyone ever reads them so I didn't bother. I'll go through the guide and see if I could add in a sort of 'what's it for' introduction to each part of the process; this would seem like a good idea; when you use these materials every day it's easy to forget that people won't necessarilly know what certain things are for!
I think your pre-preg lecture video would be integrated with custommade curing oven system explanation(type of heating device, air circulation, vacum hose vent) according to the priority of customer need is How to subtitute autoclave on this process. Or maybe you/EC will be able to provide the parts for customade oven, then it would be the advantage for beginer to void expensive trial n errors, heat device n thermostat control will be crucial I thought.
Ovens are a complicated subject; in fact they're the reason why we've waited this long to do a guide to prepreg but really this guide is intended to show that for small parts (which are the ones that lots of people struggle with because they can be impractical or difficult to infuse) you can simply use a completely standard domestic oven which you could buy second-hand off ebay for not much money at all. The thermostat control on a reasonably modern (less than 10 year old) oven will be plenty accurate enough and it's a very simple job to drill a hole through the side to pass the vacuum hose through.
To cure larger parts you would need a larger oven of course but I don't think we'll be rushing into making a guide explaining how to biuld an oven. It's actually quite complicated and we really do need to consider safety; the idea of people badly constructing an oven after loosely following our advice is not something that we want to get into. We may well design and sell a flat-pack industrial oven but first we'll need to design something that can be produced for the kind of money that people can afford. Industrial ovens start at several thousand pounds and so would be unrealistic for most people. We would like to think that something could be done for £1000-£1500 but that's that's just an aspiration, we've not done any designs/calculations to see if that's possible yet. For now, we list the type of ready made ovens you could source (domestic oven, catering oven, powder-coating oven etc. etc.) and would suggest that you run with one of those to see how amazing prepreg carbon fibre can be.
--Matt
Matt StathamEasy Composites / Carbon Mods - Technical Sales