Embodiments of the present invention relate generally to the manufacturing process, and more specifically to the manufacturing process involving binding 3D woven materials an inch thick and over.
Current 3D fabric technologies place the various fibers in an optimized 3D configuration. The woven process results in panels 6″ to 24″ from 1″ to 3″ depending on the application. A traditional manufacturing and assembly approach would then infuse woven preforms with a resin, machine it to shape, and assemble as a tiled solution with an adhesive to fill the gaps between tiles. Such an adhesively bonded seam approach has significant challenges, not the least of which is the reduction in thermal-mechanical performance compared to that of the acreage woven material.
A mechanically enhanced seam inserted into the assembly process either before or after resin infusion would offer many advantages compared to the traditional adhesively bonded approach.
This leads to other issues, however: carbon fiber tow is easily broken when bent and gets fuzzy when it comes into contact with guide bars, needle eyes, and other metal parts; there is a limitation with current market industrial sewing machines being unable to sew materials thicker than 1 inch; normal stitching using traditional industrial machines uses two threads (top and bottom) to hold two panel materials, and the location where the top thread and bottom thread loop creates a very sharp turn of thread that will break carbon fiber tow; treatment options for tow are limited due the heat resistance incompatibility between the two materials; there is frequently the strict requirement to join these tiles only using the same materials as the tiles use themselves without any additional chemicals as the additional chemicals would provide an unacceptable impurity to the resin process later.
The present invention consists of a general method of binding that avoids all the problems described in [0004]. It consists of pre-holing the panels, lining them up on top of one another, feeding tow through them both loosely to ensure thread angles are obtuse, pulling both ends of the tow to uniformly tighten the join, and rotating one panel relative to the other to bring them both into the same plane. The present invention further provides specific techniques to enable butt stitches, angle-angle stitches, and angle-normal stitches.
The present invention eliminates adhesives that would melt and not hold well at high heat.
The present invention eliminates fasteners. Fasteners are made from other materials than that which needs to be joined, creating uneven heat resistance. They require lap cuts, with limited tool options to perform the task.
The present invention eliminates Z pins. These can be performed at side but otherwise have problems similar to those of fasteners.
The present invention eliminates complex joins like piano hinges, self locking, reinforcement slats, and T-joints. These joints could not hold the material by themselves when the object is in movement.
The present invention eliminates stitch lap joints which have the limitation of requiring lap cuts.
The present invention completely avoids uneven heat resistance by making a mechanically enhanced seam using the same materials that compose the panels being joined. The novel stitching technique of paragraph [0005] prevents the majority of tow breakage that normally makes this general approach impractical.
    
    
    
  
  
  
While the present invention defines a technique completely different from what existing sewing machines are capable of doing, it is understood that machines may be developed that will rely on it, and details like the simultaneous needle handling method described in [0016] will make future automation easier.