Author
Released
1/18/2018- What is a composite?
- Where composites are used
- Composite materials
- Composite manufacturing methods
- Inspection methods
- Defects
- Repairing composites
Skill Level Beginner
Duration
Views
- [Narrator] How do you meet the demands of the modern world? Enter composites. With the need of faster, stronger, and lighter cars, airplanes, and boats, composites have become an integral part of our modern lifestyles. In this course, we will cover just exactly what is a composite, materials used to make a composite, manufacturing methods, inspection methods, damage types, repair methods.
Let's get started.
Related Courses
-
Rapid Prototyping for Product Design
with Gabriel Corbett1h 38m Appropriate for all -
CATIA V5: Surfacing
with Steven Marjieh2h 21m Intermediate -
SOLIDWORKS: Surfacing
with Gabriel Corbett1h 24m Intermediate -
Design for Additive Manufacturing: FDM
with Kacie Hultgren1h 47m Intermediate -
Additive Manufacturing: Troubleshoot 3D Prints
with Rich Cameron1h 43m Intermediate
-
Introduction
-
Welcome33s
-
-
1. Composites
-
What is a composite?3m 22s
-
Where composites are used2m 13s
-
2. Materials
-
Fibers and fabrics2m 29s
-
Matrix: Resins2m 50s
-
Core1m 25s
-
Adhesives1m 22s
-
-
3. Manufacturing Methods
-
Layup process3m 8s
-
Resin infusion process3m 34s
-
-
4. Inspection Methods
-
Tap testing1m 12s
-
Ultrasonic1m 58s
-
Radiography59s
-
Thermography1m 26s
-
5. Damage Types
-
Manufacturing defects4m 21s
-
In-service defects2m 7s
-
-
6. Repair Methods
-
Solid laminates1m 48s
-
Sandwich1m 27s
-
-
Conclusion
-
Next steps26s
-
- Mark as unwatched
- Mark all as unwatched
Are you sure you want to mark all the videos in this course as unwatched?
This will not affect your course history, your reports, or your certificates of completion for this course.
CancelTake notes with your new membership!
Type in the entry box, then click Enter to save your note.
1:30Press on any video thumbnail to jump immediately to the timecode shown.
Notes are saved with you account but can also be exported as plain text, MS Word, PDF, Google Doc, or Evernote.
Share this video
Embed this video
Video: Welcome