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#1
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I have a composite kit aircraft, and it is time to paint! But I just hate
the idea of painting it WHITE (like most all the others). I understand that HEAT is a big factor in this decision, and that white attracts the least amount of heat which could disrupt the Epoxy over time. Since my plane is held together with Epoxy, this seems like a valid concern. What do you think people? Does it have to be white?? Could one choose a light yellow, light gray, silver,etc....... and not be pushing the envelop too much? I happen to live in a very cool part of North America, so I am not too worried about regular heat (like someone in Arizona might be). Thoughts? |
#2
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![]() "firstflight" wrote in message ... I have a composite kit aircraft, and it is time to paint! But I just hate the idea of painting it WHITE (like most all the others). I understand that HEAT is a big factor in this decision, and that white attracts the least amount of heat which could disrupt the Epoxy over time. Since my plane is held together with Epoxy, this seems like a valid concern. What do you think people? Does it have to be white?? Could one choose a light yellow, light gray, silver,etc....... and not be pushing the envelop too much? I happen to live in a very cool part of North America, so I am not too worried about regular heat (like someone in Arizona might be). Thoughts? If your kit manufacturer recommends white, I suggest you follow that recommendation. At some time, you'll probably want to fly it to Texas, California, or Florida, and wouldn't it be a shame if you either chose not to because of the color you used, or (even worse) the aircraft was damaged due to heat build up. Don't let vanity or the desire to be different get in the way of common sense and/or good engineering. KB |
#3
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firstflight wrote:
I have a composite kit aircraft, and it is time to paint! But I just hate the idea of painting it WHITE (like most all the others). I understand that HEAT is a big factor in this decision, and that white attracts the least amount of heat which could disrupt the Epoxy over time. Since my plane is held together with Epoxy, this seems like a valid concern. What do you think people? Does it have to be white?? Could one choose a light yellow, light gray, silver,etc....... and not be pushing the envelop too much? I happen to live in a very cool part of North America, so I am not too worried about regular heat (like someone in Arizona might be). Thoughts? There are charts out there that give the relative effect of different colors on heat build up. Check them out I think you'll find at least a few choices that have minimal heat build up compared to white. Usually the light pastel colors will not be a problem. The other possibility is to paint it white and use color trim to liven it up! Also consider getting a reflective cover for the plane so when you travel (or at home if you don't hanger it) you can protect it better. John |
#4
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It could be white, or aluminum or other light color. Try different color
paints on similar material of the same size. Lay them in the sun and take their temperature. Lowest temperature wins. Usually you can feel the difference. You can dress up a white airplane with stripes, circles, squares or diagonals. If it is going to be in a hangar or under cover, the paint is less a problem than if it sits out all the time. You can also give it a two-tone job. Light on the top and darker on the bottom. People on the ground will see the darker colors. Colin |
#5
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On Wed, 22 Jun 2005 20:34:32 -0400, "firstflight"
wrote: I have a composite kit aircraft, and it is time to paint! But I just hate the idea of painting it WHITE (like most all the others). I understand that HEAT is a big factor in this decision, and that white attracts the least amount of heat which could disrupt the Epoxy over time. Since my plane is held together with Epoxy, this seems like a valid concern. What do you think people? Does it have to be white?? Could one choose a light yellow, light gray, silver,etc....... and not be pushing the envelop too much? I happen to live in a very cool part of North America, so I am not too worried about regular heat (like someone in Arizona might be). Thoughts? there was an architectural book out of england in the early 80's which gave a rundown on the infrared characteristics of various paint colours. It turns out that colour does not directly equate to infrared transmissability. additives to a paint may achieve what you seek. I dont have access to the reference, I only remember that it was a red book. I just point this out to give a pointer to where the answer may lie. you want the infrared transmissability data not the colour data. Stealth Pilot |
#6
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![]() Stealth Pilot wrote: .. you want the infrared transmissability data not the colour data. Stealth Pilot Actually its not so much the IR.. as much as it is heat. Dark colors cause higher heat absorption and can cause shrinkage of the underlying foam core used in moldless construction on the fast glass birds. That is why the light colors - heat reflection and rejection. Dave |
#7
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The answer depends on the resin system and core materials that are used.
All polymer materials have a glass transition temperature (Tg). If the temperature is raised above this temperature then the mechanical properties reduce rapidly and irreversible changes occur in the material. See MIL-HDBK-17 for much more detail info. The FAA and MIL-HDBK-17 recommend a buffer of 50 deg F (27.7 deg C I think from memory) between the maximum inservice temperature and the Tg of the material (i.e. Max Service Temp (deg F) = Tg - 50). You need a bloody good reason if you want to break this rule. That said you need to find out what the Tg of the materials in your airplane are. Get this from the material manufacturers - if they are materials meant for an aircraft they will have the data. When you have this calculate the maximum in service temperature. WARNING ... make sure you understand the data. What humidity, test methods, cure cycles, post cure cycle etc ... these can a BIG influence on the Tg. The data you have needs to correspond to the manufacturing processes used in your aircraft. If you want to test for Tg you can do that but you need a fairly expensive bit of test equipment but there are labs that can do the testing for you. If this were an FAA Certification program you would then be required to demonstrate (probably by test with thermocouples that the specified temperatures were not exceeded) however this is not practical for a homebuilt. Fortunately you can get a rough idea by charts that are available from a number of sources. JAR VLA has a chart in the ACJ's at the rear. This was taken from a NASA report (NASA CP-2036 and CR-3290 ). One of these NASA reports in available for download on the NASA Tech Report server. Not sure which. If I recall correctly this data was from Lockheed and I have a vague recollection that it may be for vertical surfaces (not sure). Horizontal surfaces would probably get hotter and it would be advisable to allow a little extra buffer for this. The temperatures are for 38 deg Ambient, sun at Zenith, cooling after 3 minutes taxi, zero wind. The chart gives 54 deg C for white surfaces. Light Green / Yellow is approx 68 deg C and dark colours are approx 80 deg C. So if you have a typical wet layup epoxy resin system with Tg = 85 deg C. Then 57.3 deg C would be the max surface temperature. White is just OK and all other colours are out. Of course you can get room temperature cure resins with higher Tg's (up to 300-400 deg F in specialised cases). Prepreg materials generally have Tg's 200 deg F depending on cure temperature. Some go to the mid to high 300 F range. A few cautions: Tg is dependant on the moisture content of the resin. Tg decreases with moisture content. Since composite aircraft are generally designed for an ambient humidity of 85% RH (FAA and MIL-HDBK-17 requirements) then you should use Tg's that correspond to this condition. The other major concern is that the mechanical properties of the material are a function of temperature. It is normal to design composite aircraft with the allowable stresses and strains that correspond to various environmental conditions including max operating temperature and humidity. I doubt (know) that some homebuilts do not consider the effect of environment on mechanical properties. They just design with the room temperature allowables. If this were the case then I would want to keep the thing as cool as possible ... even if the Tg was such that you could paint the plane black I would paint it white to keep the temperatures low and hence mechanical properties as high as possible. This is a complex issue and to provide any more specific advice one needs a lot more information such as info on the resin system and details of the stress analysis and material allowables used. Ask if you have more questions. "firstflight" wrote in message ... I have a composite kit aircraft, and it is time to paint! But I just hate the idea of painting it WHITE (like most all the others). I understand that HEAT is a big factor in this decision, and that white attracts the least amount of heat which could disrupt the Epoxy over time. Since my plane is held together with Epoxy, this seems like a valid concern. What do you think people? Does it have to be white?? Could one choose a light yellow, light gray, silver,etc....... and not be pushing the envelop too much? I happen to live in a very cool part of North America, so I am not too worried about regular heat (like someone in Arizona might be). Thoughts? |
#8
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![]() The rule of thumb for painting composite AC is that you can paint them any color you like as long as its white. -- FF |
#9
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The heat is in the IR region that you do not see with your eye. In the
IR spectrum things look very different. If you've ever looked at things using an IR sensitive camera you'll see what I mean. I think bees see in IR, and I noticed that flowers reflect a lot of IR even though they may seem like very dark rich colors to the human eye. Typically darker colors do absorb more IR however, but its more of a coincidence than a requirement. Those handheld non-contact temperature sensors are really cheap these days. You could make a sample sheet with swatches of color, put it in the sun for 30 minutes, then shade and measure immediately. See what kind of differences you get. If anyone is wondering why I was looking at flowers with IR sensitive cameras, it was part of testing a series of IR cut filters for a camera we were designing. A group of flowers is a stereo typical test subject for a color camera. You could make an IR pass filter (daylight filter) from a piece of exposed film negative. Put it in front of a black and white TV camera. Then point it at your test subjects. The ones that are the brightest are relecting the most IR and should be the coolest. BTW, the touch test may not be a very good test because your finger is really measuring the amount of heat rather than the absolute temperature. Put another way, touching a 150 degree F piece of plywood, or a 150 degre F piece of aluminum, you'll think the Al is way hotter because the Al will transfer more heat to your finger. firstflight wrote: I have a composite kit aircraft, and it is time to paint! But I just hate the idea of painting it WHITE (like most all the others). I understand that HEAT is a big factor in this decision, and that white attracts the least amount of heat which could disrupt the Epoxy over time. Since my plane is held together with Epoxy, this seems like a valid concern. What do you think people? Does it have to be white?? Could one choose a light yellow, light gray, silver,etc....... and not be pushing the envelop too much? I happen to live in a very cool part of North America, so I am not too worried about regular heat (like someone in Arizona might be). Thoughts? |
#10
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Fred
You forget about Henry Ford who said you can have a Model T in any color as long as it's black. Older than mud Big John `````````````````````````````````````````````````` `````````````````````` On 25 Jun 2005 09:33:00 -0700, wrote: The rule of thumb for painting composite AC is that you can paint them any color you like as long as its white. |
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