A few years okay I saw a coffee mug made totally out of carbon-fibre. Ever since seeing this I have never seen one again and I did do a quick Google and did not find anything.
So as question is there any reason, cost aside, why??
For the bold text, I think for the bling, fine, but you cannot drink out of hit other that cold drinks. As RH1300S says, hot drinks would taste horrible. The heat of the fluid would melt the epoxy and you'd be ingesting epoxy. Not too healthy. So I guess for a pencil holder, fine, but to drink out of it, not good at all.Ian P. wrote:The Ti mug would probably conduct heat (cool the beverage down) similar to a "tin" mug or an aluminum one. Fine for back-packing or camping where weight is an issue but not for sitting behind a computer musing over what to type.
Carbon fiber on it's own does have a very high thermal conductivity. Once laid up and set in epoxy the conductivity along the fibers remains high but across the grain and through the epoxy it is far less conductive.
I like the idea of a Carbon Fiber Mug, yes for the Bling but also for the conversations it would start. OK, mostly for the Bling......
A few years ago when BAR started their team, the story was that they had cabon fiber utencils in their hospitality suit and the justification was the weight they saved in hauling the stuff all around the globe.
Guess it is going to be similar to the situation with Ford parts....no problem, just make your own.
This is point I was trying to get too, would it melt the expoy at 100c.jddh1 wrote:As RH1300S says, hot drinks would taste horrible. The heat of the fluid would melt the epoxy and you'd be ingesting epoxy. Not too healthy
Good point, but the main one i was thinking was can anyone acctual drink 100c tea/coffee?James_graham wrote:I dont think the epoxy would melt till after 100[oC] Cure temp is around 120.
Why guess when you can measure? I get 92C. I preheated a temp probe to 80C while the kettle was boiling, put the probe in a cup, then poured the water from the kettle into the cup.Richied76 wrote:Good point, but the main one i was thinking was can anyone acctual drink 100c tea/coffee?James_graham wrote:I dont think the epoxy would melt till after 100[oC] Cure temp is around 120.
Besides if were getting technical, chilled milk at 4c plus the energy (heat) lost between, getting up from the pc (looking on F1technical.net) will loose you around 5c min. then brew time of 1min will cost arond another 5c.
I asume thea to be around 50-65c max... hence tea should taste nice