At the 9/28/2019 work session, a subset of the composites team made fin fillets with Proline.
What happened
4x large fillets were completed:
- 1.25" Proline Only
- 1.5" Proline Only
- 1.25" Proline on top
- 1.5" Proline on top
~8-10 team members worked on this project!
(Not all pictured)
Carbocyl amounts varied:
Min: 2.4g Max: 3.4g. After 3-4 bowls a standard value of ~2.7g was used.
Good things
Most team members were spread across tasks once in the swing of things. 2-3 were mixing epoxy and adding carbocyl, 4-5 were working the fillets.
Not so good things
- Fin tools were very bendy for the large fillets.
- We lost 2 bowls of 11 due to adding too much carbocyl and spending too much time mixing. The epoxy set in the bowl before we could add it.
- Table management: most of the table had proline on it by the end, contaminating the scale and bottom sides of test coupons
- We underestimated the volume of proline and ran out of proline.
Action Items
- Several team members expressed lack of clarity of the task at hand, to combat this:
- Write a brief SOP with at least the following details
- Type of epoxy used & mix ratio
- Amount of carbocyl to add to epoxy
- How long to mix pre-carbocyl and during carbocyl (make sure it's fast enough, but mixed well enough)
- Photos showing how to use the fin tools (clarify which angles are 90 degrees and which are 45)
- An example of how viscous the epoxy/carbocyl mixture should be
- How to measure the mass of completed fillets
- Clean tools in between fillets
- More formally organize groups – team members expressed interest in more structure & tasks
- Sub-leads do more things
- Sub-leads do more things
- Lots of things were dirty:
- Fix table management: designate wet areas and dry areas for mixing epoxy, applying fillets