ÂĚñĎ×ĆŢ

Published

From The Publisher - 7/1/2007

Well, we’ve really got a lot going on here. We just returned from SAMPE 2007, which was held for the first time on the East Coast — in Baltimore. In my conversations with visitors and exhibitors, those who were located east of the Mississippi were thrilled and loved the venue. California-based companies, it seemed to

Share

Well, we’ve really got a lot going on here. We just returned from SAMPE 2007, which was held for the first time on the East Coast — in Baltimore. In my conversations with visitors and exhibitors, those who were located east of the Mississippi were thrilled and loved the venue. California-based companies, it seemed to me, weren’t quite so convinced. The new location brought in some new attendee faces, however, and overall, most people I spoke with seemed to be invigorated by the change — then, too, maybe the soft-shell crabs had something to do with it. SAMPE’s executive director Gregg Balko told us that in light of the positive response, the organization has committed to alternating between Long Beach and Baltimore for the foreseeable future. So plan on Baltimore again in 2009. If you weren’t in Baltimore, click on “SAMPE 2007 Baltimore” in “Related Content,” at left.

Speaking of industry events, please mark your calendars for the two upcoming COMPOSITESWORLD conferences this year — High Performance Fibers 2007 and Carbon Fiber 2007. They will take place in November and December, in Washington, D.C., under the guidance of seasoned conference director Scott Stephenson, who joined COMPOSITESWORLD several months ago. Scott and I are lining up an impressive array of presenters for both events — you won’t want to miss them.

The Paris Air Show is underway as I write this. Airbus has kicked it off with a $7 billion dollar order from US Airways for around 30 planes, including a number of A350 XWBs, its better-late-than-never competitor to Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner. The total orders for both models of the redesigned A350 stands at around 100.

It seems Airbus is sticking to its guns on the fuselage for this, its third A350 concept. Despite much speculation that Airbus would eventually use a “barrel” design similar to that on the 787, in the latest report I saw from Reuters news service, Airbus reiterates that the A350 will be a 60 percent composite aircraft made of composite panels attached to an aluminum and titanium structure.

We’re also in the process of preparing a new entry into the aerospace market: Aerospace Composites – A Design and Applications Guide, the latest in our series of standalone publications that examine how composites are used in key end-use market sectors. There’s still plenty of time to join us as a sponsor — you’ll get terrific exposure and the chance to deliver your company’s message to aerospace manufacturers and OEMs. If you’re interested in being part of this exciting project or have an application you want to share, please give me a call or drop me an e-mail: judy@compositesworld.com.

After all the aerospace news I would be remiss if I didn’t acknowledge that aerospace is not the only market where advanced composites are making headlines.

Manufacturers in the automotive and wind energy markets, the subjects of our feature article investigations this issue, share a need to achieve extremely high structural performance at reduced weight — a need that could eventually make composites, probably carbon fiber composites, the material of choice.

Have a great summer, and we’ll see you soon at a composites show in your neighborhood.

Related Content

Materials

Achieving composites innovation through collaboration

Stephen Heinz, vice president of R&I for Syensqo delivered an inspirational keynote at SAMPE 2024, highlighting the significant role of composite materials in emerging technologies and encouraging broader collaboration within the manufacturing community. 

Read More

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
Glass Fibers

High-tension, vertical filament winding enables affordable flywheel energy storage system

French startup Energiestro’s prototype solar energy flywheel-based storage system aims to reduce costs with glass fiber composites and prestressed concrete.

Read More
Thermoplastics

Composite bipolar plates provide 81% improvement to hydrogen fuel cell power density

Ultra-thin CFRTP plates developed by Hycco achieve a 7.5 kilowatt/kilogram power density, high durability for fuel cells in long-flight drone and heavy-mobility applications.

Read More

Read Next

Predicting Failure

Cutting 100 pounds, certification time for the X-59 nose cone

Swift Engineering used HyperX software to remove 100 pounds from 38-foot graphite/epoxy cored nose cone for X-59 supersonic aircraft.

Read More
Composites Basics

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
Biomaterials

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