That is a good idea robogeek.
A ghetto homemade autoclave!

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this is a very good description.When a core is completely wrapped in a laminated composite, the composite matrix forms a rectangle... thinner and wider at the tips and tails, and narrower and taller at the waist. As this rectangle becomes narrower and taller, it becomes more and more resistant to deflection through the vertical axis. Much of this is due simply to the fact that the bottom and top layers of fiberglass are moving increasingly farther apart and that the core itself is increasing in vertical cross-section,...
this is correct, but at the same time where something goes wrong.If we take a wooden yardstick (or meter stick) and place it flat upon a table top with the tip protruding over the edge a bit, push down on the center of the stick with one hand, then grasp that tip and lift upward with the other hand, the stick flexes upward rather easily. But if we turn the stick 90 degrees onto it's edge and lift up on the tip, it is quite resistant to flexing. I think that the glass layer that drapes over the sidewall at the waist of the ski responds to flexing forces in a similar manner.
these ribs keep the top- and bottom layer together, the biggest problem in a carbon-foam construction, where the differences in material stiffness is huge. Dave Goode has got no problem making his skis stiff enough (he is using carbon fibre!), his problem is making them soft enough! That is why he puts most of the fibres in the 45deg. direction, this makes way too tortionally stiff skis. (about twice as stiff as normal skis).Look at the Goode 'carbon core' skis... theoretically, they are constructed with numerous vertical 'webs ' of carbon fiber sandwiched between corresponding vertical sections of foam. The company's claim is that these vertical webs contribute significantly to the ski it's stiffness.
Take a look at the curves in the PDF: http://www.endrehals.no/Flexcurves%202007.pdf, the stiffest mid skis are all sandwich, mostly because these skis are stiffer in general, of several reasons. Visualize all the Salomon curves, the Atomic Big Daddy. As you know, all these skis are cap construction. Then visualize all the Armada skis, The Kneissl, The Atomic Thug. All these are sandwich skis. These are just some examples that your theory has no coherence with reality. All these capped skis are softer in the middle than the sandwich ones.Subjectively, when I do the hands-on flex arc testing at the ski shops, it always seems that the cap skis are much flatter through the waist than are the sandwich skis... in general.
It is definately a factor, but it is so easy to compensate for that it is not really a problem (make the core 1/10 of a mm thinner)From an engineering perspective, maybe the vertical layer of sidewall fiberglass is not considered to be a factor in the stiffness of the ski.