Shrieker wrote: ↑09 Feb 2018, 00:11
@Manoah2u,
To be perfectly honest the thought crossed my mind, but I thought no one could've been crazy enough to build a racing car chassis from wood, but apparently they were
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And the canopy looks sick too ! That's a cool little gem from racing history !
Greg Locock wrote: ↑08 Feb 2018, 21:08
Note that they carefully don't mention
stiffness.
I thought this sure would get a mention here. And honestly didn't think it would take so many posts before some1 mentioned it
yeah it was funny that i actually stumbled upon it just this week actually, when the indyscreen discussion started, i remembered that 60s canopy and started browsing my bookmarks and googling, and then came across this formula 2 car and was quite surprised that there was a wooden body, so i saved it and read about it.
actually wanted to make a post about it but wanted to do some research about it first and haven't gotten around to it. then i saw your post and i couldn't keep it to myself
offcourse it's not entirely the same, polymers vs 'pure wood', even if it would be plywood, are essentially worlds apart, but i found it interesting nonetheless to mention that wood in racing isn't new.
shouldn't come as a surprise really, after all, cars originate from horse-'powered' coaches (hence coachbuilders) that got the horses replaced with electric engins at first and in due time with gasoline powered ones. wood has been regularly used in the automotive industry. replacing even doors and body panels at certain moments in history.
offcourse there's a reason why 'basic wood' got replaced by other materials.
it is funny though that technology is finding it's way 'back' to 'origin' materials if you may.
a couple of weeks or months ago already i read an article about transparant wood - there is a process that can turn wood transparant like glass, even though it's not really similar in clearness and smoothness, it's interesting nonetheless especially in application possibilities.
some historians, scientists and archeologists as well as paleontologists have recently joined forces in examining whether the 'bleaching/transparancy process' of transparent wood is at all new or could actually be an ancient craft gone lost over time, and whether (very) old houses could actually have had transparant wood installed. the paleontologist sounds like the odd duck in the mix but is due to researching whether nature had the required materials or functional equivalents of it present 'hidden' in certain plants, trees, etc.
if it turns out that it actually is a long lost art / craft, and is nothing new at all, then it could completely turn archeology and science upside down.
i thought it was interesting, since if wood or polymers of it can be used to make materials stronger and stiffer than carbon fibers than that likewise would turn the industry upside down - and potentially plummit carbon fiber prices even though it's still an intensive process which is essentially what gives it the cost.