marcush. wrote:...One reason why wet layups of Carbon are never ever useful apart from looks..
somebody else covered the shear carrying function of the matrix. the quote above isn't correct. wet layups can be only slighly heavier in resin if the fabric and resin are weighed. and they can be very useful - the early and mid career rutan designs were wet layup. (i don't know what Scaled does now.)
carbon fiber polymer matrix composites show the most advantage over aluminum when the loads are in one direction so that the layup can be something like 70/15/15 or 80/10/10 0/90/+-45, thus giving a load direction modulus much higher than aluminum even given the modulus knockdown for the off-angle fibers and for the matrix (the charts cited above are for the fiber alone.)
for a driveshaft dominated by torsion, the layup would be mostly 45s.
if the pushrods loads are primarily compression, then the layup could be predominantly 0 degree uni as above. since the buckling depends on the modulus of the material, i suspect that the buckling stiffness is more important an advantage for the pushrods than the weight savings.
for the ultimate compression resistance, those pushrods should use the pultruded rods with slightly pretensioned fibers pioneered by Graphlite (but now made by others also) for the 0 uni direction.