Hamymac wrote:I don't know how far or how fast news of this product has traveled... but an unbreakable spray coating on carbon fiber would, it seems to me, help to prevent the kind of splintering that is prevalent in F1 impacts... thus reducing the chance of injury to drivers and damage to cars and tyres. It could be a means of capturing flying debris before it, well, flies.
The video shows the product in action...
http://www.wimp.com/sprayunbreakable/
I am not affiliated with it, I just wonder if anyone thinks this, or some form of compound rubberized paint might be of benefit to the sport.
There's nothing particularly special about this coating - it's just exploiting the well known behaviours and advantages of composite materials. Composite materials are so wonderful because they get to share both compressive strength (in this case the breeze block), and tensile strength (in this case the rubber like coating).
Carbon fibre is so strong exactly because of the exact same principal - it's sharing the characteristics of the carbon fibres, and the epoxy that binds it all together.
What a composite material will
not do is make something "unbreakable". Instead, it'll just make something with lots of nice properties (strength being one of them). This product almost certainly wouldn't give CF any nicer properties than it already has, and if it does, it almost certainly comes with some other penalty (e.g. I fully expect that this stuff is pretty dense, and would require removing so much structural material to make the car light enough that it would be basically useless).