Vacuum bagging vs. Press Machine Assembly
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Vacuum bagging vs. Press Machine Assembly
Hey All,
I'm the new guy on here...so at the risk of asking a previous question (haven't found the discussion on here yet if it exists), I'm hoping I can get some initial insight from some of the experts on here...if a similar post exists I'd appreciate a link?
I'm starting my first board construction project...going through the design and analysis of the board right now (materials selection, epoxy/fiber ratios, etc.) but have some manufacturing questions:
1. Vacuum mold vs. Pressing (hydraulic, pneumatic, etc.): Assuming the mold is structurally sound, and a tapered wood core (~7mm in center, ~2 mm on ends), will a vacuum bagging technique also produce favorable results? Perhaps preforming the core (separate vacuum pull process, or CNC the core from laminated wood strips) and then vacuum bagging the room temp epoxy, 22oz triaxial glass, base layer, top sheet and other components concurrently?
2. If anyone has used a vacuum bagging process, what is the max psi you pulled with your pump setup?
Any thoughts are much appreciated. Thanks all-
I'm the new guy on here...so at the risk of asking a previous question (haven't found the discussion on here yet if it exists), I'm hoping I can get some initial insight from some of the experts on here...if a similar post exists I'd appreciate a link?
I'm starting my first board construction project...going through the design and analysis of the board right now (materials selection, epoxy/fiber ratios, etc.) but have some manufacturing questions:
1. Vacuum mold vs. Pressing (hydraulic, pneumatic, etc.): Assuming the mold is structurally sound, and a tapered wood core (~7mm in center, ~2 mm on ends), will a vacuum bagging technique also produce favorable results? Perhaps preforming the core (separate vacuum pull process, or CNC the core from laminated wood strips) and then vacuum bagging the room temp epoxy, 22oz triaxial glass, base layer, top sheet and other components concurrently?
2. If anyone has used a vacuum bagging process, what is the max psi you pulled with your pump setup?
Any thoughts are much appreciated. Thanks all-
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Tons of people do vacuum bagging.
Max pressure you can get is atmospheric pressure, roughly 14.7psi at sea level on a standard day.
For a pneumatic press, people press anywhere from 50-100psi, and everything in between. I've only seen one guy on here do hydraulic, seems like more hassle than air to me.
Max pressure you can get is atmospheric pressure, roughly 14.7psi at sea level on a standard day.
For a pneumatic press, people press anywhere from 50-100psi, and everything in between. I've only seen one guy on here do hydraulic, seems like more hassle than air to me.
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Great feedback fellas, thanks! I've done some vacuum bagging before, but it was a flat carbon fiber panel, nothing with camber so I wanted to confirm.
deepskis- Just so I'm clear, are you suggesting using solely tipspacers on the nose/tail and using wood core in between? Is this a ptex material, or comparable?
Thanks again for the quick feedback-
M
deepskis- Just so I'm clear, are you suggesting using solely tipspacers on the nose/tail and using wood core in between? Is this a ptex material, or comparable?
Thanks again for the quick feedback-
M
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- Joined: Sat Aug 04, 2012 4:59 pm
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Yeah I just do edge-to-edge just like deepskis. I don't even attach it with anything, I just set the tip spacers in during the layup, and I've been lucky I haven't had any slipping/gaps.
There's lots of options for temporarily holding it in place - super glue, hot glue, staples (on the outer edge where it'll get cut off after pressing)
There's lots of options for temporarily holding it in place - super glue, hot glue, staples (on the outer edge where it'll get cut off after pressing)
twizzstyle wrote:Yeah I just do edge-to-edge just like deepskis. I don't even attach it with anything, I just set the tip spacers in during the layup, and I've been lucky I haven't had any slipping/gaps.
I have not been so lucky... I just use som small pieces of tape on the bottom side. Easy and it works!

Ya, you can do full wood core but it's a pain as it sits above your mold unless you prebend you tip and tail.hegan wrote:Would thinning the core in the tips and tails down to a smaller dimension work? Say 2mm to 1mm.deepskis wrote:
1. Use tipspacers.
I tried steam but it softened up the glue and made the individual wood pieces splay.
Read thru the logs, you'll see some pretty ingenious wood benders.
Tip spacer is a million times easier.
sam
You don't even have a legit signature, nothing to reveal who you are and what you do...
Best of luck to you. (uneva)
Best of luck to you. (uneva)
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Been thinking about this, what do you do when you have a long low profile rocker? Do you just make the tip spacer really long? I'm working on a pair right now they will be my first pair with a long rocker and in SnoCad they have a huge tip spacer length at 358mm. Has anyone else come across this problem?