Burkhard Domke, head of Airbus Engineering Inteligence, "published" a PDF document on lessons learnt from new Boeing 787 first batch of airplanes.
It's interesting how the document, leaked at FlightBlogger made its way into the public domain and, moreover, how informed are modern companies about their competitors.
However, beyond that, it contains a number of graphics on the technologies used by Boeing to lay carbon fiber. Before I copy/paste one that called my attention, allow me a brief introduction.
The 787 is a last generation airplane, with a "cigar" made of carbon fiber, instead of aluminium.
The size of the airplane and the goals that Boeing has for 100 airplanes per month (!), stretches the technology of carbon fiber to its limits and beyond, not from the point of view of structural design, but from the point of view of manufacturing.
First, I find remarkable that Airbus proclaims Boeing having problems with their assembly line due to "low-wage, trained-on-the-job workers that had no previous aerospace experience" who work for Boeing's suppliers. It does not make me comfortable about the quality of the airplane... Nor I am tranquil about Boeing having issues with the FAA because heat is transferred through the carbon fiber fuselage. I think (based only on my very limited readings about the material) that could bring forward structural problems in the long term.
Second, and final, here you have the more important slide, from my point of view:
From 0.5 lb/hour of manual carbon-fiber lay down rate (in the 80's) to 30 lb/hour in actual production, a 15 times increase in actual carbon-fiber manufacturing speed. Still, that is way beyond optimistic rates of 500 pounds/hour predicted. At this last rate, an F1 car could be produced (if round, I imagine) in 2 hours.
Any comments by people with experience are appreciated, starting by how this huge use of carbon fiber could either starve the market, or make carbon fiber so cheap that it becomes available to the mass market.
The names of the companies involved in carbon-fiber manufacturing are Alenia, Spirit, Hawker de Havilland, Kawasaki, Vought and Global Aeronautica. I don't have the time, but it would be interesting to watch a picture of a multiple-head carbon fiber laying machine for an airplane the size of a 787 (I think they have one at Spirit). I posted here, ages ago, a picture of the machine that Rutan used for building Spaceship One, the first private space rocket.
Bob Rutan, master of composites, inside Spaceship Two