Hi Guys,
This thread came up just as I was playing around with some
Lexan. I was thinking about forming some
lexan for my Onex fuel cap cover. The cover ended up right where I want to see during takeoff and while in the landing flare.
So, I'm going to piggy back onto this thread for a post.
First, turns out you can form
Lexan in the oven by heating to 310 F. My oven's "bang bang" controller over shot about 18 degrees but it didn't seem to hurt anything. The
Lexan didn't form by itself but was easy to form around a can by hand at that temperature.
My fuel cutout from the scrap box:
Then this thread came up and I decided to throw the thing in some Avgas. While I was at it I cut a little square of
lexan from a sheet I had. I also included a piece of stressed
lexan for good measure.
I let them soak for an hour and got them out and cleaned them up with some WashWax. The stressed piece was the only piece that "appeared" to be affected. It was heavily crazed.
I went ahead and soaked the samples in Mo Gas just for good measure.
The crazing of the stressed piece continued but the other samples appeared unaffected again.
The question that popped into my mind was: Are all of the pieces damaged but the damage is only visible on the stressed piece?
The best way I could come up with to answer that question was to "pinch" the two flat pieces between my fingers and see what happened. As suspected the crazed piece snapped in two. The other piece just folded as you would expect an unexposed piece of
lexan to do.
Now there's some useless information generated by someone obviously out of anything to do :-)
Wes