Claims
- 1. A method of fabricating highly reinforced, hollow tubular structures with thick, dimensionally precise walls densely packed with filamentary materials in a substantially void free and uniformly dispersed thermoset resin, said tubular structures being of a size so large in length, diameter and wall thickness as to otherwise potentially subject them to distortions during filament winding and cure, said method comprising:
- (a) winding continuous filamentary materials about a hollow, thin walled, aluminum mandrel having a central longitudinal axis and ribs extending radially inward supported solely by the mandrel wall, said mandrel capable of radial expansion at elevated temperatures, said winding being performed so as to form a plurality of alternate layers comprising layers of windings which are substantially circumferential relative to said axis and layers of winding which are substantially axial windings of filamentary materials, said axial windings being at a small angle with respect to said axis and grouped in pairs of plies in which the first small angle of each of said plies in said pairs is the negative angle of the second small angle, each of said pairs being temporarily circumferentially bound and compressed radially inward by a tensioned belt looped around axially successive circumferential portions of the pair of axially wound plies being bound and compressed by said belt during winding of the subsequent circumferentially wound layers, said belt translating axially along said longitudinal axis during rotation of said mandrel as the subsequent windings of filamentary material progresses and forms the next layer of said substantially circumferential windings, said pairs being so bound while said pairs are additionally anchored at the ends of said mandrel, each of said alternate layers being in a matrix of thermosetting resin consisting essentially of an epoxy resin composition that gels below about 40.degree. C.;
- (b) heating said filament wound mandrel to a temperature and for a time sufficient to cure the thermosettable resin, said heating being accomplished in an oven and in a manner such that the interior of said mandrel is raised through radiant heating thereat to a higher temperature than the temperature to which the exterior of the filament wound mandrel is exposed during said heating, said temperature difference being maintained during substantially the entire heating step, said mandrel expanding during said heating;
- (c) cooling the resultant filament wound structure at a rate such that stresses in said structure resulting from contraction during cooling of said structure are minimized;
- (d) sliding said structure that has undergone said contraction off said mandrel.
- 2. The method in accordance with claim 1, wherein said temperature difference is between about 5.degree. F. and 25.degree. F.
- 3. The method in accordance with claim 1 wherein said filamentary materials comprise graphite.
- 4. The method in accordance with claim 1, wherein said interior is heated by radiant heaters carried centrally within said mandrel.
- 5. The method in accordance with claim 1, which comprises reusing the mandrel to make another filament wound structure.
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 337,803 filed Jan. 7, 1982, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,479,086.
US Referenced Citations (16)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Date |
Country |
54-028368 |
Feb 1979 |
JPX |
0028368 |
Mar 1979 |
JPX |
2012187 |
Jul 1979 |
GBX |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
337803 |
Jan 1982 |
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