by Chad » Wed Jun 06, 2012 3:47 am
Most answers are on the Soller website- different sleeves have different "stretchability"- he lists diameter ranges for each sleeve. At the small end of a sleeve's range, he fibers are closer to aligned with the length axis (say +/-30 degrees), and at full expansion the fibers get close to perpendicular (say +/- 70 degrees). Unless you're engineering things to the nth degree, this probably won't matter.
A rule of thumb for most tubular structures is to divide the reinforcement 80/20 between uni and off-axis fibers, and try to keep the laminate balanced or symmetrical from inside to outside. If you can't do figures to design the laminate schedule, then copy the thickness of a known, successfully used aluminum section. The part will usually be a little stronger, and you'll save weight by the difference in density from the aluminum example to the carbon part. An example is a gnav strut- other similar boats use a 1.25" x 1/16" wall aluminum tube, so find a mandrel that's close and work out the laminate as 1/16" / .0018" of thickness per oz of cloth or fiber = 35 oz of fiber needed. I'd use a 6oz sleeve (can't get any thinner I don't think), 24 oz of uni (just tapes cut so their width roughly matches the circumference), followed by an outer layer of 6oz sleeve.
Small sleeves you can wet out on a table and then ooch over the mandrel, or wet it out in place with a brush. Tapes should definitely be done on a table, then after your last sleeve you need to aggressively "milk" the cover in each direction. It really helps if you've left a little extra sleeve at each end, so you can clamp it to something overhead and hang something heavy below. This will get you good consolidation, and you can probably use your gloved hands to also sort of squeegie a little excess resin out as well.
To get a nice finish takes either more coats later to fill the weave (and sleeves have deep weave), or a surface wrap of some sort to compress things a little. I haven't use the shrink tubular film, but I've used spiral wraps of shrink tape (pita, but for simple shapes -straight tubes- it works), or spiral wraps of strips of peel ply (less compression, but no shrinky wrinkles). For my tiller, I did only one coat of clear resin only, so it's not rough but still has a weave texture- it seemed appropriate for the task.
The sleeves will go on any convex surface, but work best the closer the section is to round or oval- you'll get no compression on flat sides, and they will bridge across any concavities.
They're braided like your socks. It's some kind of machine that does it. The fibers are continuous helixes, but they do go over and under each other like PW cloth.
Try some on a project- they're fun to play with!