Fiberglass
Woven fabrics are produced by interlacing glass fibers in a regular
pattern or weave style. As a result, weave controls a fabric’s
stability, conformability to shape, surface characteristics, and fiberglass chopped strand mat, in
many cases, the overall appearance for your part. And to fully
understand the value that weaves deliver, we need to understand some
fabric basics.
Filament vs. Fiber
Filament
is a single strand of reinforcement. Thousands of filaments bundled
together, running straight and parallel to one another, make up a fiber.
For most reinforcements, like fiberglass, this is referred to as
roving. In the case of carbon fiber, it is usually referred to as tow.
Tow is measured in “K,” or thousands. For example, a 3K fabric means
there are 3,000 filaments per fiber tow.
If
the filaments of a fabric are twisted together, rather than running
straight and parallel, they are referred to as a yarn. If yarn is used
to produce fabric, it is referred to as cloth.
Warp vs. Fill
If
you look at a roll of fabric, some of the fibers run in the direction
of the roll and are continuous for the entire length of the roll. These
fibers are known as the warp, and are often referred to as ends. The
shorter fibers that run crosswise along the width of the fabric are
known as fill and are referred to aspicks.
Fabric Count
Fabric
count refers to the number of warp (ends) and fill (picks) fibers per
inch. For example, a 24 x 22 fabric has 24 ends in every inch of fill
direction and 22 picks in every inch of warp direction. Note that you
count warp fibers in the fill direction and fill fibers in the warp
direction.
没有评论:
发表评论