marcush. wrote:one important point is:
for weight savings composite ,not carbonfibre is what is driving the weight down.
In fact a glassfibre skin can be made lighter than carbonfibre ,which is very hard to get a closed surface with no telegraphing ..
so a nomex paper core with glass skins is what you need to make a ultralight panel.
I´d guess most of the cf use in car production is just a matter of being fancy.It´s a bit like the EV vehicle hype.
from my own AoA experience, I can say that "telegraphing" is more a case of a proper use of resin, curing and post cure, polyester and vinyl resins are much more prone to this than epoxy(which costs a lot more, like 3-4 times more expensive than polyester), and the better you compress the laminate, the less it may show, because it has to do with fibers having enough flexible (resins, some more than others, even cured, are still flexing/streching) material between them to move around
autoclaves only advantage is the additional pressure you may put on the part to compress the laminate more, everything else, like curing temp and post cure can be achieved without the pressure chamber
and I have no idea how you can make a lighter skin from glass than from CF with the same strength properties (I already explained that telegraphing is a non-issue with CF), it just makes no sense to me at all
on the other hand, if you want to go the cheap/easy way, spray or hand lay up is the way to go, and this is where you go for glass + polyester or vinyl resins (CF will not work well with these resins, saturation is sort of an issue), but these parts are in no way structural or lightweight compared to aluminum, or even steel counterparts, good for prototyping or low volume production though
I also think that the people who have never worked with composite laminates might imagine this to be a wonder technology that makes manufacturing complex things very easy, it is not actually, there are many tricks to get consistent good results even in low volume production of complex geometries, especially when the parts get small and have tight radiusses, on the other hand you have hydroforming, which has made it quite easy to shape metal (alu/steel) in almost any imaginable shape with easely repeatable success and is very adaptable to high volume production