Hey guys, Ive been workin on this project for a couple months and wanted to share the process so anyone whose been wanting to make thier own frame can see one route to go about it. I made this one in my bedroom for the most part. The dropouts, headtube, and bb tube are all made of steel and bonded to the carbon skin. The geometry is based on a Evil Imp. or .243. Here's a shot of the jig i made out of MDF board. The axles, bb, seattube and headtube are all adjustable.
I decided to make a male mold for the carbon, and then use it as the core material for the frame. Here's a shot of the preliminary foam core.
And after many hours sanding and shaping here's the finished core:
Heres the first layer of carbon on there: the carbon is H8 weave, 17mils thick. It builds up real fast. It came from sollercomposites.com as did the epoxy and the kevlar. It comes as a dry fabric, which i wet out on a piece of plastic, and then transfer to the core. It is then covered in peel ply, and put in a vacuum bag for 4-5 hours to cure. The vacuum setup came from avt-composites.com and was one of the more expensive pieces of equipment for this project.
and more carbon on:
The finished frame with a layer of filler to smooth out the surface. This is the main downside to a male mold, the surface finish can be less then stellar. So unfortunately you wont be able to see the weave on this frame. mayby the next one though...
and heres the painted frame built up:
It rides like a dream, its really stiff and the geometry feels perfect. Im planning to have a website up with a more detailed description of the process and all the supplies soon. anyways, enjoy!
I decided to make a male mold for the carbon, and then use it as the core material for the frame. Here's a shot of the preliminary foam core.
And after many hours sanding and shaping here's the finished core:
Heres the first layer of carbon on there: the carbon is H8 weave, 17mils thick. It builds up real fast. It came from sollercomposites.com as did the epoxy and the kevlar. It comes as a dry fabric, which i wet out on a piece of plastic, and then transfer to the core. It is then covered in peel ply, and put in a vacuum bag for 4-5 hours to cure. The vacuum setup came from avt-composites.com and was one of the more expensive pieces of equipment for this project.
and more carbon on:
The finished frame with a layer of filler to smooth out the surface. This is the main downside to a male mold, the surface finish can be less then stellar. So unfortunately you wont be able to see the weave on this frame. mayby the next one though...
and heres the painted frame built up:
It rides like a dream, its really stiff and the geometry feels perfect. Im planning to have a website up with a more detailed description of the process and all the supplies soon. anyways, enjoy!