Producing composite mouldings using pre-preg laminating techniques
Overview
This standard identifies the competences you need to produce composite mouldings (such as moulds, components, splashes, jigs) using pre-preg laminating techniques, in accordance with approved procedures. You will be required to use appropriate drawings, specifications and documentation to produce various mouldings, using the correct pre-preg laminating production techniques.
You will be expected to prepare a range of tooling, apply release agents, and prepare composite materials. You will produce a range of composite mouldings, incorporating a variety of features and using a range of techniques and processes. Mouldings produced will include laminates and sandwich structures, using a range of resin, fibre and core materials.
Your responsibilities will require you to comply with organisational policy and procedures for the production activities undertaken, and to report any problems with the production activities, equipment or materials that you cannot personally resolve, or are outside your permitted authority, to the relevant people. You will be expected to work with a minimum of supervision, taking personal responsibility for your own actions and for the quality and accuracy of the work that you carry out.
Your underpinning knowledge will provide a good understanding of your work, and will provide an informed approach to applying pre-preg laminating techniques and procedures. You will understand the production techniques used, and their application, in adequate depth to provide a sound basis for carrying out the activities, correcting faults, and ensuring the work output is to the required specification.
You will understand the safety precautions required when carrying out the moulding activities and when using the associated tools and equipment. You will be required to demonstrate safe working practices throughout, and will understand the responsibility you owe to yourself and others in the workplace.
Performance criteria
You must be able to:
- work safely at all times, complying with health and safety and other relevant regulations, directives and guidelines
- follow the correct drawing or any other related specifications for the moulding to be produced
- determine what has to be done and how this will be achieved
- obtain and prepare the appropriate tools, equipment and materials
- carry out the moulding or laying-up activities using the correct methods and techniques
- produce mouldings to the required specification
- check that all the required operations have been completed to specification
- complete the required production documentation
- deal promptly and effectively with problems within your control and report those that cannot be solved
Knowledge and Understanding
You need to know and understand:
- how to work safely at all times, complying with health and safety and other relevant regulations, directives and guidelines
- the hazards associated with carrying out pre-preg laminating techniques, and with the composite materials, consumables, tools and equipment used, and how to minimise these and reduce any risks
- protective equipment (PPE) that is needed for personal protection and, where required, the protection of others
- the application of regulations in relation to the storage, use and disposal of composite materials and consumables
- the specific environmental conditions the must be observed when producing composite mouldings
- how to extract and use information from engineering drawings and related specifications (to include symbols and conventions to appropriate standards) in relation to work undertaken
- how to interpret drawings/lay up manuals, imperial and metric systems of measurement, workpiece reference/datum points and system of tolerancing
- quality procedures used in the workplace to ensure production control (in relation to currency, issue, meeting specification) and the completion of such documents
- conventions and terminology used for pre-preg laminating techniques
- the different types of resins, reinforcement, catalysts, accelerators and additives used, and their applications
- the different types of fibre materials, fabrics, orientations, their combinations and applications
- building up laminates (including orientation and balance of plies) to minimise spring and distortion in composite mouldings
- different core, insert and filler materials, and their applications
- the visual identification of both raw and finished composite materials
- identification of materials by product codes
- different types of production tooling used for producing composite mouldings, and their applications
- the identification and rectification of defects in production tooling
- methods of preparation for patterns, moulds and tooling, including the correct selection and use of surface sealers and release agents
- the correct methods of storage, thawing and handling of pre-preg materials (including monitoring temperature, storage life and out-life)
- methods used in the application of pre-preg materials to tooling surfaces (including methods of tailoring and cutting)
- correct methods of storage and handling of ancillary and consumable materials
- selection and use of ancillary and consumable materials to meet performance requirements
- tools and equipment used in the pre-preg laminating activities, and their care, preparation and control procedures
- problems that can occur during the lay-up process (including modifications to the ply lay-up, and defects such as contamination and distortion)
- how modifications and defects can be overcome during the pre-preg laminating activity
- cure cycles (including temperature and pressure ramps, dwell times, post curing)
- the need for monitoring the cure cycle (using thermocouples, probes, chart recorders and data logs)
- procedures and methods used for removing mouldings from production tooling
- the identification of defects in the composite moulding
- the care and safe handling of production tooling and composite mouldings throughout the production cycle
- the production controls used in the work area, and actions to be taken for unaccounted items
- how the composite moulding relates to its own quality documents, and the production tooling used
- the extent of your own responsibility and to whom you should report if you have problems that you cannot resolve
Scope/range
Scope Performance
- Carry out all of the following during the moulding activities:
- obtain and use the appropriate documentation
- adhere to procedures or systems in place for risk assessment, personal protective equipment and other relevant safety regulations and procedures to realise a safe system of work
- provide and maintain a safe working environment for the moulding activities
- obtain and check that all tools and equipment to be used correct for the operation to be carried out and are in a safe and usable condition
- follow safe practice/approved moulding techniques at all times
- return all tools and equipment to the correct location on completion of the moulding activities
- segregate and dispose of waste materials using the correct procedure
- leave the work area in a safe and appropriate condition on completion of the activities
- Carry out all of the following activities when preparing production tooling:
- check that tooling is correct and complete
- clean tooling and remove resin build-ups
- check for surface defects
- correctly apply sealers/release agents
- clean and store tooling suitably after use
- Carry out all of the following activities to prepare materials for production:
- obtain correct materials for the activity
- thaw material removed from freezer storage
- identifying defects in pre-preg materials
- check that materials are fit for purpose and in life
- check availability of ancillary materials required
- cut materials to correct shape and orientation
- check materials when provided in kit form
- identify and protect materials in the work area
- Produce a range of mouldings, using four of the following types of production tool:
- pattern
- mandrels
- metal
- tooling block
- glass pre-preg
- carbon pre-preg
- female tooling
- male tooling
- multi-part tools
- matched tooling
- closed tooling
- Produce a range of mouldings incorporating five of the following in the lay-up:
- butt joins
- overlap joins
- staggered joins
- orientated plies
- inverted plies
- balanced piles
- inserts
- fixtures
- Produce a range of mouldings incorporating seven of the following shape features:
- internal corners
- external corners
- horizontal surface
- vertical surface
- double curvature
- concave surface
- convex surfaces
- return surfaces
- joggle details
- nett edges
- Produce a range of mouldings using six of the following methods:
- production of ply templates
- nesting of ply templates
- material cutting and kitting
- shaped locators
- joining boards
- loose tooling
- intensifiers
- vacuum de-bulk
- hot de-bulk
- pressure de-bulk
- moulded datum features
- placement jigs
- laser projection placement
- video feedback placement
- other specific method
- Produce a range of mouldings using two types of resin from:
- Bio resin
- thermoplastic
- epoxy
- phenolic
- bismaleimide
- cyanate ester
- other specific type of resin
- Produce a range of mouldings using techniques for two types of fibre from:
- natural fibre
- thermoplastic
- glass
- aramid
- carbon
- hybrid
- other specific type of fibre
- Produce a range of mouldings using two types of reinforcement from:
1. continuous
2. uni-directional
3. tapes
4. tissues/veils
5. woven
6. braids
7. multi-axis
- Produce a range of mouldings using three types of core material from (where applicable to the sector or process):
```
1. solid timber
2. end grain balsa
3. thermoplastic core
4. rigid foam
5. syntactic core
6. expanding core
7. fibrous honeycomb
- aluminium honeycomb
other specific material
```Use three of the following methods when using core materials (where applicable to the sector or process):
1. core templates
2. pre-shaping core
3. core chamfers
4. core splicing
5. peel plies
6. bonding paste
7. edge filling
8. adhesive/resin films
9. potting/filler compound
10. single stage curing
11. multi-stage curing
- Prepare the moulding for temperature curing using two of the following methods:
1. oven
2. autoclave
3. heated tools/moulds
4. heat mats
5. heated press
6. curing lamps
7. infrared heating
8. UV curing
9. electro-magnetic inductance
10. micro-wave
11. other specific method
- Prepare the moulding for pressure consolidation using two of the following methods:
1. vacuum bags
2. hot de-bulk
3. pressure de-bulk
4. pressure bags
5. thermal mould expansion
6. fibre tensioning
7. press
8. autoclave
- Where vacuum bags are used, use four of the following processes/methods:
1. check vacuum integrity
2. surface bagging
3. envelope bagging
4. multi-part envelope bags
5. internal bagging
6. through-tube bagging
7. pleats and tucks
8. reusable bagging
9. use of vacuum fittings
- Produce a range of mouldings which comply with one of the following standards:
1. BS, ISO or BSEN standards and procedures
2. customer standards and requirements
3. company standards and procedures
4. recognised compliance agency/body standards