Wheels (Australia)

TECH Forged carbonfibr­e

HIGH-FIBRE DIET KEEPS LAMBORGHIN­I CARBON COMPONENTS REGULAR

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CARBONFIBR­E is a composite material comprised of two key ingredient­s. Fine fibres provide enormous tensile strength and component stiffness, while a resin holds the fibres together and helps form the part’s shape. Since it was invented, manufactur­ers and material specialist­s have been increasing the strength of carbonfibr­e by improving the fibre volume fraction; the ratio of carbon to resin. The more fibres you can squeeze into the component, the stronger it becomes. It’s also more consistent. A void of resin within the material (or even worse – an air bubble) is a weakness, so filling more of the space with fibre also reduces the chance of component failure. That’s where Lamborghin­i’s ‘forged’ carbonfibr­e comes in. Instead of hand-laying many sheets of fibre mat into a mould, which is labour intensive and can introduce defects, a mixture of chopped fibres and resin is forced into a closed mould. The extreme pressure excludes air and excess resin and allows intricatel­y shaped components to be produced. The Lamborghin­i Huracan Performant­e’s spoilers and fins are perhaps the most well-known applicatio­n of the material, but Lamborghin­i has also produced prototype suspension arms and even con-rods. The aesthetic difference is immediatel­y obvious. Instead of the trademark woven appearance of traditiona­l carbonfibr­e, forged carbon has a random fibre arrangemen­t and a unique marbled look. It’s lighter, stiffer, more reliable, looks cool and it’s driving down the cost of high-tech composite materials. That’s why you’re going to see a lot more forged carbonfibr­e in many applicatio­ns, including cars.

1 DRIVING FURTHER

Golf equipment manufactur­er Callaway partnered with Lamborghin­i to develop forged carbonfibr­e, and the resulting high-tech clubs took a little Lambo influence for their name too. Callaway says its Diablo Octane drivers will drive a ball eight metres further than the previous model.

2 STRONG CONNECTION­S

With a density one third that of titanium but greater in strength, the potential of forged carbonfibr­e is obvious. Lamborghin­i’s next-gen V12 is likely to get forged carbon con-rods; around 50 percent lighter than current steel components. That means lots of revs and big power.

3 LIGHT SHOW

Forged carbon debuted at the 2010 Paris motor show with the reveal of the Lamborghin­i Sesto Elemento. Its suspension arms and monocoque used the forged material and the car’s name translates to ‘sixth element’, a reference to the atomic number of carbon.

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