Anthony:
Sorry to have missed this until now, and there was no intent to be rude - I've
just been very bad about keeping up with e-mail.
The engine I referenced was in service a very long time ago, and I don't recall
clearly who all the suppliers were. But for silica phenolic prepreg, it was
very likely HITCO. In the interim, of course, the prepreg industry has
consolidated like the rest of the aerospace industry, and I don't even know
where HITCO landed.
I just did a cursory search for vendors, and found this:
https://parkaerospace.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/F-554-M_a4.pdf
Yes, the layup was densified by vacuum bagging, and it was subsequently
autoclaved. But the tape-wrap method proved very effective, and the
densification step was debated endlessly as a result. Vacuum bagging was
never eliminated, so there's no telling whether it would have been fatal to
omit it.
Best,
Mike
On April 13, 2021 at 8:20 PM, Anthony Cesaroni <anthony@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Mike,
May I ask where your sourced the phenolic prepreg? Park Electrochemical are the
only manufacturer of silica, glass, quartz and carbon phenolic prepreg, bias
and straight tapes that I know of that will sell it without silly minimum
quantity volumes. You can expect to pay anywhere from $150 to $250 per pound.
Dry ice packed shipping costs not included. You may be able to get away with
just vacuum bagging many of the grades but the densification will be far from
optimum if it’s an autoclave grade. You can pressure bladder cure the autoclave
grade as well.
Thanks.
Anthony J. Cesaroni
President/CEO
Cesaroni Technology/Cesaroni Aerospace
http://www.cesaronitech.com/
(941) 360-3100 x1004 Sarasota
(905) 887-2370 x222 Toronto
From: arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of
Michael Kelly
Sent: Tuesday, April 13, 2021 4:21 PM
To: arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [AR] Re: Ablative engine composite layup
Jon:
I'd find a supplier of silica phenolic prepreg, and see if you can get a roll of
tape long enough to build your engine (which is not a trivial size) at a
reasonable price. When you wrap it, you stand the tape on its edge on the
mandrel, albeit at a slight angle (angled toward the front of the engine, i.e.
>90 degrees measured in a counterclockwise sense from the engine inner wall).
If the burn time is very long, use a high density silica phenolic for the throat
to keep it dimensionally stable. Add a flat wrap of at least two layers on top,
then machine the whole thing to fit in a metal housing beefy enough to hold the
chamber pressure you plan. Downstream of the throat, the pressure will drop
dramatically. Thus, the exit cone can be overwrapped with any handy composite
cloth/resin of sufficient strength.
I cut my teeth on an engine built just this way. It was about two and a half
times the thrust of the engine you are planning. It could fire for a total of
195 seconds, either in a number of burns, or a single long burn. IIRC, the
ablative thickness was about an inch in the chamber, two inches at the throat,
and then tapered down to about half an inch at the exit.
We static fired and flew scores of these, without a single failure.
Good luck!
Mike
On April 12, 2021 at 11:13 PM, Carl Tedesco <ctedesco@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Jon,
A long time ago I got some advice from an RRS member to make an ablative liner
for a LOX/alcohol motor (~660 lbf) using fiberglass and this resin. The
combustion chamber liner was made by soaking fiberglass sheets in this DAP
resin glue and wrapping it around a carboard tube to close to net size. To get
an exact fit to the metal motor tube, the wrapped liner was coated with bondo
and lathed to the diameter of the motor case. For this motor the throat and
nozzle were graphite. It worked with no noticeable erosion for 10 seconds.
--- Carl
From: arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of
Jonathan Adams
Sent: Friday, April 9, 2021 5:47 AM
To: arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [AR] Ablative engine composite layup
Hello everyone,
I'm getting to the construction stage of a 4.5kN ablative liquid propellant
engine, and I was wondering if anyone had any good resources for composite
layup for the ablative wall. Possibly even resources specific to composite
layup for small rocket engines.
I haven't been able to find many good resources out there for how to do this,
and I wanted to know if anyone could point me in the right direction for how to
go about this. Even personal experience for how to do this right (and
cost-effectively!) would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Jon.