ÂÌñÏׯÞ

Published

Shooting trouble

I know it’s only April, but in the magazine business, we’re always looking ahead. About this time each year, I start thinking seriously about the next year. I think about the topics we might cover, the types of articles we might approach differently, technologies that we’ve not visited in a while and emerging

Share

I know it’s only April, but in the magazine business, we’re always looking ahead. About this time each year, I start thinking seriously about the next year. I think about the topics we might cover, the types of articles we might approach differently, technologies that we’ve not visited in a while and emerging technologies we’ve not yet visited, as well as the challenges our readers face that we can help them solve.

All of CT’s editors and contributors do the same, collecting story ideas throughout the year, and when it comes time to plan for the new year, we meet, unearth these ideas, mull them over and discuss them. Our story ideas can come from almost anywhere — a trade show, a paper presentation, a composites fabricator (like you), an article in the popular press, a plant visit, an article from an ancillary industry, a press release, a source from another story, hallway conversation at a conference, etc. Some survive the winnowing process and appear in these pages the following year. Some do not. Last year, CT’s writers and editors sifted through more than 50 story ideas, and you’re now seeing the fruit of that labor. For 2009, I’d like at least some of these ideas to come from you.

One aspect of composites fabrication that we’ve not heavily covered is process engineering and process management — that is, the hands-on, day-to-day challenge of managing and working with a molding process and machinery to make sure they are doing everything they should be, and doing it well. I’d like us to consider covering such stories more, and that’s where you come in.

As we get ready for 2009, I’d like to know more about some of the on-the-floor molding process and engineering challenges you face every day and every week that you think deserve attention in the pages of CT. Is there some aspect of your RTM process that is always a problem, and you’d like to hear how others solve it? When you troubleshoot a molding process (spray-up, infusion, RTM, etc.), what kinds of challenges do you chronically encounter? Is cutting cycle time your biggest challenge, and do you have a hard time meeting it? Do you have a machine or piece of equipment that is difficult to manage and operate? Is design-for-manufacturing so foreign in your shop that you have to “engineer” around designs? Are there tooling challenges that you think should be explored in CT? Are your scrap rates through the roof and beyond control? If a part is rejected, is there a common cause that you can’t fix?

This is your chance to be heard, and just as there are no dumb questions, in the magazine business there are no dumb ideas. I’m taking any and all comers, and I’ll take them however you want to send them. All of my contact information is below and I strongly encourage you to send me your shop-floor thoughts, ideas, concepts, frustrations, challenges, solutions, complaints, worries, concerns, wishes and cogitations. Vote early and vote often, and I hope to hear from you soon.

Jeff Sloan

Tel: (719) 647-9772

Fax: (719) 647-9773

E-mail: jeff@compositesworld.com

Related Content

Curing

AM method enables tool-free, energy-efficient thermoset composites production

University researchers highlight how the combination of a thermally curable resin system with photothermal curing eliminates the post-curing steps involved in discontinuous, continuous fiber parts fabrication.

Read More
JEC

Induction heating system enables OOA composites processing

JEC World 2025: Roctool focuses attendees’ attention on the light induction tooling (LIT) system targeting efficiency, sustainability and performance.

Read More
Aerospace

Clean Sky 2 outer wing box demonstrator validates OOA LRI, shimless assembly and SHM

Full-scale wing box project achieves TRL 5 with 2% weight reduction and 4% reduction in recurring production costs through improved manufacturing efficiency and assembly processes.

Read More

Clean Aviation's regional aircraft technology testbed #2 demonstrates advances with composites

European project advances OOA outer wing box using resin infusion and thermoplastic composite technologies.

Read More

Read Next

Design/Simulation

Next-gen fan blades: Hybrid twin RTM, printed sensors, laser shock disassembly

MORPHO project demonstrates blade with 20% faster RTM cure cycle, uses AI-based monitoring for improved maintenance/life cycle management and proves laser shock disassembly for recycling.

Read More
Application

Scaling up, optimizing the flax fiber composite camper

Greenlander’s Sherpa RV cab, which is largely constructed from flax fiber/bio-epoxy sandwich panels, nears commercial production readiness and next-generation scale-up.

Read More
Ceramic Matrix Composites

Ceramic matrix composites: Faster, cheaper, higher temperature

New players proliferate, increasing CMC materials and manufacturing capacity, novel processes and automation to meet demand for higher part volumes and performance.

Read More