Lamborghini Sesto Elemento Concept
lamborghini sesto elemento concept car |
Conceived at the Sant'Agata factory's Advanced Composite Research Center in cooperation with technology partners Boeing and the University of Washington in Seattle, the heart of this technology demonstrator is a fully structural carbon-fiber monocoque that unites 60 percent of the structure in a single bonded unit that incorporates most of the brackets and mounting hardware for the remaining parts. The crash-structural core is formed using a patented low-pressure resin-transfer mold process known internally as RTM-Lambo.
Lamborghini Sesto Elemento Concept Rear
Here's how it works: Lightweight, inexpensive carbon-fiber male and female molds are constructed to form a complex part like the passenger tub, which integrates the seat shells in the concept. Dry sheets of four-axis carbon fiber (picture two square weaves with the layers rotated 45 degrees) are cut using computer-guided blades, and the ones that must conform to complex contours are molded by heating them to 400 degrees and squeezing them in an 88,000-ton press. A tiny bit of resin helps them hold this shape. These sheets and various foam inserts required to provide structural sections are positioned in the master mold with more laser guidance, along with aluminum inserts that are later tapped as mounting plates. Then the male mold clamps it all in place; a vacuum is created to remove any air from the part; and the resin is injected. Early Lamborghini estimates suggest monocoques built this way at supercar volumes and even a bit higher could cost as little as a third as much as a conventional steel one, but notes that this procedure does not produce a class-A paintable surface. Hence the structural outer roof panel is made using more conventional resin-impregnated and autoclave-cured two-axis carbon-fiber
2010 lamborghini sesto elemento concept |
2011 lamborghini sesto elemento concept |