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by 542458
4531 days ago
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Count me as skeptical. The strength of high-quality carbon fibre comes from having many pieces of fibre woven together over the surface omnidirectionally (Okay, I'm mostly wrong here - see below). This machine seems to simply lay it down in a (more or less) continuous strand, which means that the fibres will be cohesive rather than woven together. You can do this without a special printer - all you need is some carbon fibre/pla filament [1]. My bet would be that polycarbonate 3d printed parts [2] will be stronger that these pseudo carbon-fibre parts in most situations. For a pretty freaking cool view of how high-quality carbon fibre parts are made check out this youtube link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4DLr8qHliI [1]: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1375236253/proto-pasta-... [2]: http://www.makerfarm.com/index.php/2-2lb-1kg-1-75mm-clear-po... |
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No, not at all.
The strength of CFRP (carbon fiber reinforced polymer) comes from having very long strands of carbon fiber, ideally as long as the whole piece, held together by some polymer matrix such as epoxy resin. It also comes from having a very high fiber-to-epoxy ratio in the final product, which is usually achieved by squeezing out all the extra epoxy using vacuum while curing.
The length of the fibers, and the minimal amount of epoxy, is what makes CF strong. Short fibers, and having too much epoxy matrix, weakens the composite.
There is a kind of extruded CF where short CF fibers are mixed with epoxy matrix and extruded in the desired shape. This is strong compared to ordinary plastic, but not as strong as long-fiber CF.
What you're describing is woven CF, and it's not the strongest there is. The strongest CF pieces are made of unidirectional CF, where all fibers are oriented in the direction of the main effort. E.g., CF tubes are strongest when they are made of unidirectional CF, with fibers as long as the whole tube.
Woven CF is a good compromise in that it's reasonably strong in several directions in the plane of the CF cloth. Also, for CF tubes, an outer layer of woven CF gives it a bit more resistance to splintering.
Another way to achieve multi-directional strength is by laying unidirectional cloth alternatively in different directions. The piece will gain strength from each unidirectional layer in a specific direction.
Most people recognize the classic "CF look" only when the top layer is woven. Unidirectional CF cloth has a different look. This is why many CF items are made of unidirectional cloth, with a single woven layer on top.
If this CF 3D printer can lay long-fiber CF, and can achieve a very high fiber-to-epoxy ratio in the final product, then chances are the pieces produced this way will be strong.