CompositesWorld

NOV 2016

CompositesWorld

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NOVEMBER 2016 4 CompositesWorld FROM THE EDITOR ยป I was on the road a fair amount in September, traveling to Novi, MI, for the SPE Automotive Composites Conference and Exhibi- tion, to Chicago for IMTS and then to Anaheim for CAMX. Each event offered a nice glimpse of the many ways composite mate- rials and technologies are meeting a variety of manu- facturing challenges today. If you read this column regularly, you know that I have a sensitivity to the high level of activity in the composites industry and its proclivity for rapid change and adaptation. And I certainly saw much evidence of that during my travels. However, it wasn't until the end of my last day at CAMX that I came to a full appreciation of the path composites have traveled over the past two decades. On that day, I had an appointment with an exhibitor that manufactures curing ovens. I arrived at the company's booth and met the marketing and communications person there, a gentleman I'd not met before. He told me that, indeed, he was relatively new to the industry. Or, rather, he was new to the composites industry as presently constituted. As we talked more, he revealed that he'd previously worked for another composites industry supplier in the mid- to late-1990s, but he had subsequently left that employer and worked in other industries and markets until 2016, when he returned to compos- ites with his current company. e last composites-related tradeshow he'd attended for his previous employer was a SAMPE conference. "I don't remember much about it," he recalled, "except that it was small and focused almost entirely on composites in defense and sports cars." CAMX was his first tradeshow in the new job, and, gazing around the exhibit hall, he could not believe the difference. "I look around at the composites industry now and . . . holy cow!" Many of you reading this likely have no experience or memory of the composites industry that spans 20 years, so it is difficult to put its current state of the industry into context with the past. And even if you have 20 years or more of experience, the gradual nature of change likely makes thoughtful retrospection an "I remember when" rarity. But, if we think about my new friend at CAMX and what he "missed" in his almost 20 years away from composites, it is daunting. He missed: Composites breaking into commercial aerospace in a big way with the 787 and A350. e development of the F-35 jet fighter, the military's largest consumer of composite materials today. e wind energy boom that fueled unprecedented use of composite materials in wind blades. e closed molding revolution, which is fast putting open molding in the rearview mirror. e application of carbon fiber in sporting goods, ranging from golf clubs to hockey sticks to tennis rackets. And a dizzying array of mergers and acquisitions. In short, he missed a lot, and he returned just in time to witness firsthand how composites will move into high-volume automotive production. ese megatrends have been launched by different people and companies for the reasons we always list when we talk about composites: High strength, light weight, durability, corrosion resistance, etc. But we often overlook the fact that these mega- trends are only possible because the composites industry is what I call chronically dynamic โ€” full of people not just comfortable with change, but obsessed with it, willing to tinker and try and poke and prod and fiddle and tweak to solve a problem or meet a challenge. is is engendered, in part, by the dynamic nature of composites themselves, the products of almost infinite resin, fiber, tooling and processing variations, which makes tinkering so easy and tempting. e big question we face now is this: What will our chronic dynamism produce over the next 20 years? is is difficult to contemplate because understanding where we're headed requires impossible-to-come-by knowledge of the disruptive technologies the future might have in store. A good starting point might be this simple statement: e application of composite materials has, over the past two decades, gotten easier, faster and less expensive, and it will only become more so in the two decades to come. So, don't go anywhere, but if you do, be prepared to come back to a much-changed composites world. In the composites world, change is good โ€“ and habitual. JEFF SLOAN โ€” Editor- In- Chief

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