
I am not sure if it make you feel better but I saw the same philosophy in all businesses I've been working for - aviation, energy, automotive, petrochemical, civil and few others. they are doing silly savings to be on schedule just to start everything again the next day as rework is needed... they call it development.goony wrote:their has always been a strange philosophy in composites, we never have enough time to do the job properly but always have enough time to do the job twice
so by saving 10 hrs its cost us 2 weeks
Isn't this the most critical part of the "safety" of the sport. How are they allowed to cut this phase short? ::emails FIA::....goony wrote:(It looks like McLaren used the 2009 season to actively develop their existing car. It is still astounding that there is such a discrepancy between the reported test schedule at Brawn and McLaren. If McLaren scrapped their molds they may have decided to switch to a different design of the front suspension or the nose concept ext year. Red Bull type of top rails?)
No the problem is that we have a schedule to work too and it cant be broken![]()
so to get the molds in time they cut the cure time by 10 hours![]()
and when they post cured it it sagged and warped![]()
their has always been a strange philosophy in composites, we never have enough time to do the job properly but always have enough time to do the job twice
so by saving 10 hrs its cost us 2 weeks![]()
goony
Someone must be nuts to do something like that. I mean we are talking about a chemical crosslinking reaction that is known for ages. People in composites ought to know the critical cure time based on the particular resin and circumstances down to a 10 min tolerance.goony wrote:No the problem is that we have a schedule to work too and it cant be broken![]()
so to get the molds in time they cut the cure time by 10 hours![]()
and when they post cured it it sagged and warped![]()