747h ...I waited for this question to come really and it had to be asked by you really =D> and I do admit not to have the explanation. for sure the fact cannot be ignored that those two materials have
a spectacular different behaviour over temperature...
Back then Stewart Gp claimed that using aluminium bulkheads was causing their gearbox casings to crack and leak ..(but maybe they suffered more because of the poor bonding faces they were able to realise and maybe also less than perfect bonding process...
As for the aluminium honeycomb sandwiched by carbonfibre skins...the stress over thickness maybe not the big issue obviously but what abaut the behaviour of a 2m board when put in an oven and tempered to 120°C?
by design a flat board would not be able to distort as all forces should equal out but as the temp goes down the alumium should shrink and put the core under considerable tension ,right?
so it maybe it is that you do have to treat the honeycomb core as a cell by cell thing so it is not like a long beam going through the entire length of the 2000 mm composite board which would for sure lead to spectacular failure over a temperature delta of say 120°C?
@exp ...I really know what you are talking about ...working in such an environment with people who know everything about ProE ,Catia V5 R19 but get a set of big eyes when you raise concerns when they are introducing a four point fixation of a component...
I also got the impression that most of them do not even have the slightest feel for dimensioning of components....in my view the CAD does not really lead to nicely engineered products...but to multiple compound curves and complicated transformations combined with undercuts that cannot released from the mold as well...not to speak of the simplest errors of dimensions being changed by accident or negligance..on the screen it always looks fine...Maybe i work with the wrong people but this is my experience ,be it at the OEM or the suppliers I worked for ...
They will love you expensive..as you will inevitably just look and pinpoint the key errors in one quick random glimpse at the screen..