Submitted by ChickenTeriyakiBoy1 t3_zq2cv6 in technology
themagicbong t1_j0wg295 wrote
Reply to comment by RverfulltimeOne in U.S. FAA proposes airworthiness criteria for Archer Aviation air taxi by ChickenTeriyakiBoy1
I worked making parts for Blackhawks for a lil while, and though there is obviously a large diff between military and civilian, there was definitely a giant chunk of change spent on the chain of custody information, and certainly a huge chunk of the cost to produce any part was in labor. The actual pre preg carbon we used was cheap in comparison. Something like a rotor blade may have over 100 layers of carbon, all hand placed, mind you, and ANY foreign object like a hair or something landing on the black carbon between any layer can cause the part to not bind together in that location. All parts were ultrasounded after coming out of the autoclave and before moving onto trimming, and then finally the part went to assembly. I worked in layup. If any void or any imperfection is found, 99% of the time, the $50,000 1' x 1' panel would be thrown in the trash, not much of any repairs allowed. And while we may not have sold a 1' x 1' panel, if we did, that is actually just about what it would cost to purchase from the company I worked for. Everything was meticulously watched by computers, as well as every step of the layup that I did had my name, date, and signature attached.
RverfulltimeOne t1_j10ub0z wrote
Glad read this. Most just step into a plane and think nothing of it. Massive amount of work from all sectors make it possible then countinious never ending maintaining of the things.
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