satch wrote:From your photos I'd say that your skis are abut 100mm wide. I would say that a 12mm plywood core with 750g/m² triax on both sides is rather soft. So when flexing the skis you'll easily reach the Point where the top Skin starts buckling.
A couple of weeks ago I made a pretty similar sample to test vacuum Infusion. It had about the same dimensions as your skis regarding width and thickness of the core with 750g triax layers. I flexed the samples after demolding and got the same result. when flexing the sample, the longitudinal fibers of the top layer started buckling.
where did you put the longitudinal fibers? Next to the core or on the outside? My guess is that the second variation wouldn't be as buckling resistant as the first. But up to now it's only a guess. Haven't been able to find anything about that in literature.
The ski dimensions are 136 / 94 / 122, so pretty close to 100.
I also didn't pay attention to if the longitudional fibres of my triax were against the core, or away from it.
Thinking about it I agree that having them away from the core should add a bit of stiffness to the skis.
As I can detect a bit of a cross pattern under the veneer, I am pretty sure the Longitudinal fibres are against my core.
I've decided to toss these, or hang them on the wall and put it down to a learning experience. I have enough materials for another set, so I'll start building the cores tonight, then I have Friday night to start building a new pair, and if I am lucky should get them in the press in the weekend. The hard work with the profile table, mould and ski template are all done.
Maybe I should use my own suggestion to someone else here on the forum to drill a bunch of holes in the skis and use it as a Schnaps / shot tray. (Problem is I hate Schnaps!)
I am going to do a full Ash core.
Does anyone else think that one layer of 750g/m² triax on either side of the core with a 0.6mm Veneer top layer is not enough?
I could add a layer of 440g/m² Unidirektional to the bottom also. Or would this be too stiff?
I am nobody. Nobody's perfect, so I must be perfect.