Monday, November 28, 2011
First Design Idea
So I played around with the Lazarus fairing design to see if I can make it shorter (click on image to enlarge). I think we can recess the both wheels into the fairing and place the rider in a much more laid back riding position and have the rider straddle the front wheel as well. This will allow us to make the canopy much smaller and reduce the fairing height even further. Stay tuned...
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
So how did I get here?
The right side full size foam mold! |
I couldn't believe that my project was becoming "real"! |
Now the real work started as we prepared the molds for the wet layup process. We spent quite a bit of time working on the molds. I have fond memories of spending many hours in George's barn on cold and rainy nights! It was a blast, really.
Sealing the mold surface with polyester resin. |
Applying Duratec primer to the mold surface. |
Getting ready to do the wet layup! |
This was the very first part we pulled out. Success!I learned quite a bit about composites building this fairing.
First composite part made is a success! |
The fairing is coming to life. |
I was happy how well the fairing came out. |
Here are some photos at the 1998 ASME Collegiate HPV championships. We did quite well. San Joaquin Delta College also did well. I liked their fairing but their bike was very unstable.
At the 1998 ASME Collegiate HPV Championships on Denver, CO. |
The winning bike and the Cal Poly HPV Team. |
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Mechanical 3D CAD Software galore!
As some of you I am a mechanical engineer in the aerospace industry. Over the years I have used several well known 3D CAD programs like Pro/ENGINEER, Solidworks, I-DEAS, and AutoCAD. What do all these programs have in common? They are extremely EXPENSIVE! Our team can't afford to purchase any of these programs. Now most of these programs have "student" versions that are rather low cost. These are basically stripped-down versions of their commercial verisons which means that a significant amount of functionality has been stripped away. Plus many of them have licenses that expire after a year of two. That just won't do. So searched the Internet to see if there are any free 3D CAD software available in cyberspace. To my pleasant surprise there are quite a bit of free open source 3D CAD programs most of which I have never heard of. Some of the following that caught my eye and may have potential to be our design software include:
BRL-CAD
BRL-CAD
BRL-CAD is a powerful cross-platform Open Source
combinatorial Constructive Solid Geometry (CSG) solid modeling system that
includes interactive 3D solid geometry editing, high-performance ray-tracing
support for rendering and geometric analysis, network-distributed framebuffer
support, image and signal-processing tools, path-tracing and photon mapping
support for realistic image synthesis, a system performance analysis benchmark
suite, an embedded scripting interface, and libraries for robust
high-performance geometric representation and analysis.
For more than 20 years, BRL-CAD has been the primary
tri-service solid modeling CAD system used by the U.S. military to model
weapons systems for vulnerability and lethality analyses. The solid modeling
system is frequently used in a wide range of military, academic, and industrial
applications including in the design and analysis of vehicles, mechanical
parts, and architecture. The package has also been used in radiation dose
planning, medical visualization, computer graphics education, CSG concepts and
modeling education, and system performance benchmark testing among other
purposes.
PowerSHAPE-e
A fully functional, 100% free, CAD solution.
Featuring state-of-the-art surface creation and editing, PowerSHAPE-e allows
you total design freedom, giving you the tools you need to create exciting 3D
forms effortlessly. Achieve the perfect balance between form and function using
PowerSHAPE-e’s unique blend of surface, solid and triangle modelling.
Autodesk123D
123D is a free solid modeling software program based on the
same Autodesk technology used by millions of designers and engineers worldwide.
Not an engineer? No problem, with Autodesk 123D you can design precise and
makeable objects using smart tools that let you start with simple shapes and
then edit and then tweak them into more complex shapes.
Blender
Blender is the free open source 3D content creation suite,
available for all major operating systems under the GNU General Public License.
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These are just some of the 3D CAD software that I came across. I'm sure there are many more. I look forward to researching many other CAD programs.
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