Haha after FSAE, I would never ride in a car with carbon wheels.Jersey Tom wrote:Reminds me of FSAE.
Cool visually though, for sure.
No kidding. It's the center of half-engineering half-handwaving decisions along with dubious manufacturing and car setup. Just saying, that's what it makes me think of. I recall seeing student built CFRP rims in ~2004-05 which resulted in some ooh's and aah's.marcush. wrote:Did it done it..Tom ..please FSAE is not the centre of the world...
That's fundamentally my point.CF wheels are a reality [...] for a long time and bladder type inside molds are not new to the world either.
m,marcush. wrote:....The wheel does not look very much like it was designed for CF with all those hard edges ....
Any reasons why not?Tim.Wright wrote: Haha after FSAE, I would never ride in a car with carbon wheels.
I do accept your input -no issue here but have you looked at the basically non existant radii at the transition of spokes to the rim? it does not look at all like a designed layup.But then -the wheels did survive all tests ..but to call them ultralight is a bit too enthusiastic ...don´t ask for the price bang for buck this must be insane..flyboy2160 wrote:m,marcush. wrote:....The wheel does not look very much like it was designed for CF with all those hard edges ....
i know this sounds counter intuitive, but at a right angle transition in a carbon fiber joint - say in an aircraft stiffener or here between the spokes and the rim - a very sharp corner is better.
look at this composite Z stringer from Fokker:
and this blade stiffener:
(if you're bonding or cocuring to the skin,you still want feather out the edge of the footer on the skin, as you can sort of see in the blade photo.)
i've seen the actual pull tests to confirm this sharp corner design. it's against everything you think until a composite stress expert explains it to you.
[edit] what i said above is for a layup design. it still holds for a 3D woven "T" preform.
They are from the same company as those in the original postajdavison2 wrote:http://www.sscnorthamerica.com/tuatara.php been around for a long time