Polymer and Fiber Engineering Composite Hard Hat Test

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  • čas přidán 24. 04. 2014
  • This was part of a 2014 senior design project, partnering with V2 Composties, that tested the structural integrity of hard hats made from fiberglass, aluminum, and carbon fiber. Watch the video to see the results!

Komentáře • 88

  • @dqmc07
    @dqmc07 Před 3 lety +20

    This makes me feel much better about my purchase of a carbon fiber hard hat for my tree work, Thank you students.

  • @slowdancer5563
    @slowdancer5563 Před 6 měsíci +3

    My B.F. McDonald aluminum hard hat was manufactured in 1935, one year before the patent was granted. It was handed down to me by my grandfather, (my mothers' side of the family) in 1982 when I turned 18 years old. I have worn that safety helmet on logging crews, oil riggs and all sorts of construction sights over the decades and have kept the original liner safely stowed away as a keepsake. That antiquated piece of equipment saved my skull more than once and is still giving me great service.

  • @burningsporkdeath
    @burningsporkdeath Před rokem +7

    Hardhats are not designed to take a direct compressive force like you applied, they are designed to protect the user from impact forces.

    • @conmanumber1
      @conmanumber1 Před 6 měsíci

      Yes just to take the initial blow.
      I have a plastic Chinese made American branded hard hat which took big hits from tree debris. On all events it was hard on my head but saved me. If it was a New Zealand made certified hat it would had split but safer. Anyways I'm happy with it.

  • @ryanburbridge
    @ryanburbridge Před 5 lety +29

    Another thought i had was the fact that the carbon fiber did NOT deform leads me to think MORE energy would be transferred to the head. Where the fiberglass would absorb some energy by deforming. Just a thought

    • @jtofgc
      @jtofgc Před rokem +1

      The suspension system transfers the load around the head well enough that neck compression is a bigger concern. If the hat bends an inch and a half on impact, your skull is taking that impact directly and you'll wish you just had a neck injury.

    • @ubacow7109
      @ubacow7109 Před rokem

      More energy is distributed to the head, but in the case of the gfrp it would deform and if it made direct contact with the head then you would have a transfer of energy

    • @IamCooper-rk5bn
      @IamCooper-rk5bn Před rokem +2

      You don't want the hat to deform, that causes brain and skull injuries. The suspension in the hard hat is to absorb and distribute the energy. It's not a car, where its designed to crumple.

  • @skywatcher651
    @skywatcher651 Před 4 lety +4

    Nice to see these young people doing something meaningful. I wish them all the best in life and happiness.

  • @tarzan6405
    @tarzan6405 Před 4 lety +2

    Great test. Us construction workers appreciate it!

  • @bradbillman5385
    @bradbillman5385 Před 5 lety +1

    Great video. Thank you for sharing this very valuable information!

  • @AboutComposites
    @AboutComposites Před 7 lety +35

    This test is wrong guys, I'm sorry. You must do drop weight impact test for the right comparison.

    • @Hexabyte_Studios
      @Hexabyte_Studios Před 4 lety +2

      Yeah...

    • @TUONOv4
      @TUONOv4 Před 4 lety +3

      I agree. There needs to be a real world test done. Drop a common construction item from at least 20 feet. I’m a believer in the carbon fiber. It’s an all around stronger material and it’s lighter.

    • @kiwan5425
      @kiwan5425 Před 4 lety

      Exactly.

  • @IEleMenTIx
    @IEleMenTIx Před 7 lety +11

    well...slow compression testing says nothing about material strength or dimensional stability when you want to make a statement about "hats getting hit in a construction environment" (0:43) rather do an impact test

  • @arednecksgarage
    @arednecksgarage Před 9 lety

    Very good job on the test and video I enjoyed it and learned from it

  • @beshamlakeram1807
    @beshamlakeram1807 Před 7 lety +2

    very good test....

  • @sheet-son
    @sheet-son Před 2 lety +1

    Not sure if there is a professor guiding you guys but it should be an impact test. An static 550lb load the size of a brick on a jobsite is quite impractical.

  • @captainconner4060
    @captainconner4060 Před 5 lety +5

    There is a reason the vast majority of loggers and professional Sawyers use an Aluminum Skull Bucket.. it "absorbs" the impact to reduce injury. You want the material to "give way" to some degree to reduce shock. I still have mine to this day and would never trade it for any plastic or fiber ones. The only realm that this changes is those involved in or around electrical hazards.

  • @funnymusic-dance-doctor69

    How u hav taken ply angle orientation and thickness of ply

  • @Mr.G_Rattlesnake
    @Mr.G_Rattlesnake Před 6 lety +7

    So if I understood correctly the best one to use would be the anti force Feild generator?

  • @Jay_Mac1775
    @Jay_Mac1775 Před rokem +1

    I think a compression test is widely different than impact testing

  • @EricLidiak
    @EricLidiak Před 8 lety +6

    How thick does the carbon fiber need to be to provide those results?

  • @wontonmin6481
    @wontonmin6481 Před 8 lety

    good job guy's!!!

  • @Chickengunny45
    @Chickengunny45 Před 3 lety

    Does one want a hat that is unbreakable or should it break under some force to absorbs the energy transferred to the neck while the suspension system suspends the dent away from the skull?

  • @amramer163
    @amramer163 Před 9 lety

    was the carbon fiber made using pre-preg without an autoclave or did they use an autoclave during manufacture?

    • @BobClemintime
      @BobClemintime Před 9 lety

      Typically when people say "wet layup", as they did in the video, it means they laid the carbon fiber by hand by combining dry fiber with epoxy (ie not pre-preg). It is unlikely that they used an autoclave to cure it.

  • @DankTank374
    @DankTank374 Před 4 lety

    Just thinking but wouldn't it be blunt force ?

  • @FirstLast-tx3yj
    @FirstLast-tx3yj Před 4 lety

    How thick is the thick carbon fiber

  • @Fresprt
    @Fresprt Před 7 lety +2

    Well done, thanks.

  • @davevann2925
    @davevann2925 Před 3 lety

    How about hats weight?

  • @gymguy6869
    @gymguy6869 Před 5 lety

    Test graphite?

  • @SaftonYT
    @SaftonYT Před 4 lety +1

    I'm probably way off-base, but wouldn't you *want* the helmet to have some measure of deformation (within reason)? Sort of like the crumple zones on a modern automobile?

    • @brunolorenz3411
      @brunolorenz3411 Před 3 lety

      Yeah i was thinking the same thing otherwise it might just break your neck

  • @nickturberville2282
    @nickturberville2282 Před rokem

    Roll tide lol. I couldn't resist

  • @honorservice8073
    @honorservice8073 Před 2 lety +2

    I wouldn't call it very accurate. In industry anything that strikes your head is falling. So a test of slow over time weight test sure shows how strong the material is but doesn't do much to show if it obsorbs impacts. Plus hard hats primarily work hand in hand with the retention straps also stretching and obsorbing some of the impact energy. Like a seatbelt.

  • @shook919
    @shook919 Před 8 lety

    ok... now OSHA needs to approve these caps, ASAP@

  • @shawnjohnson8421
    @shawnjohnson8421 Před 5 lety +2

    They do know that the skull bucket helmet is mostly used in forestry work not construction

    • @brunolorenz3411
      @brunolorenz3411 Před 3 lety

      No they probably don't and evidently they don't know that your head doesn't get slowly pressed it gets impacted

  • @ThrowingItAway
    @ThrowingItAway Před 6 lety +3

    static load testing isn't the same as dynamic load testing...

  • @JosephDeLuna-yj8vg
    @JosephDeLuna-yj8vg Před 3 měsíci

    Wow!

  • @Natel164
    @Natel164 Před 4 lety +3

    Anyone else watching this in 2020 the year of our lord XD

    • @fartmcnuggets5247
      @fartmcnuggets5247 Před 4 lety

      hindsight is 2020 just like Jesus

    • @Natel164
      @Natel164 Před 4 lety +2

      Thanks for the likes, I hold on to those

    • @Natel164
      @Natel164 Před 4 lety

      @@fartmcnuggets5247 well said brother

  • @sam-ww1wk
    @sam-ww1wk Před měsícem

    Yup, there's a reason they don't make mountain bikes out of fiberglass, jokingly referred to as "feebleglass" in the marine industry. I'd be interested in seeing an aramid weave go up against the carbon.

  • @ADAM76MCT
    @ADAM76MCT Před 2 lety

    Tested 4 hard hats and only discussed 3 of them….

  • @fartmcnuggets5247
    @fartmcnuggets5247 Před 4 lety +2

    I love HELMETS and really know that they PROTECT and SAVE. However, as some of you have pointed out, the armor of Helms isn't being paid a great deal of attention by some in today's PC and PlayStation communities. Specifically, I've noticed that many people are reluctant to trade or sell their HELMETS because of the lack of IMPORTANT SHOP SERVICE provided by other players in the community. This can be quite frustrating when you are looking for a GATHERING of NEEDED PREP or LUBRICATE ingredients (imagine a small but wondrous place that automatically completes all your requests with the help of other players)

  • @ramblin_man23
    @ramblin_man23 Před 3 lety +1

    War Eagle!

  • @luciusirving5926
    @luciusirving5926 Před 5 lety

    Make the fiberglass hat thicker and it'll be stronger per pound than steel. I also doubt that the aluminum hat is 6061, which is pound per pound stronger than steel, probably some cheap alloy.

  • @TechnoGlobalist
    @TechnoGlobalist Před 6 lety +2

    Sory, but if you had used the same Layer thickness, glassfiber would have won (especialy if youd had made a impact test, where it can make use of its lower youngs modulus and thus absorb more energy than the carbon fiber) because E-Glass has about the same tensile strength than generic carbon fibre. Dont make tests where you have a desired result and manipulate the test till you get the results you desire. Be honest, be scientific.

    • @fartmcnuggets5247
      @fartmcnuggets5247 Před 4 lety

      The TENSILE STRENGTH of glass is nothing compared the the MORAL STRENGTH of the UNITED STATES. - Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 27, 2013
      This probably wasn't what Trump had in mind. On Thursday, the presumptive GOP nominee tweeted: "Dishonest media" and "phony media," followed by, "Failed @nytimes story on women in the w/meeting was just exposed as false on refutation by Chief of Staff. More soon. #FAKE NEWS."
      The president of the free world manipulates TRUTH, so this was just patriotic!

  • @Tentsumi
    @Tentsumi Před 4 lety +1

    Here from ADHD's world lol

  • @evelynfarfellwooosh1219
    @evelynfarfellwooosh1219 Před 7 lety +1

    there is a strength of everything. carbon fiber is not the strongest.

  • @CanadianBriar
    @CanadianBriar Před 4 lety +3

    the carbon fiber is more resilient for certain, but when you're talking about safety gear like a helmet, it's to act like a crumple zone in a car and absorb the shock, not transfer it into the body of the user. you see it time and again, terrible injuries sustained by people in cars with little to no visible damage, but a car that just blows apart they walk away from.

  • @joeycepeda4659
    @joeycepeda4659 Před 6 lety +2

    Finally, a fair test of carbon fiber. Every youtube test I have seen makes the carbon fiber 50 times thicker then the metal.

    • @borton6
      @borton6 Před 5 měsíci

      Not a fair test. Bricks don’t hit you and continue applying pressure.

  • @DankTank374
    @DankTank374 Před 4 lety

    I think with common sense and it applys here def needs to be blunt force. Drop a brick or 20

  • @chroniclerofthe70s
    @chroniclerofthe70s Před 6 lety +10

    Test failure. Despite testing for material hardness, the test fails to account for compression of neck vertebrae.
    Regardless of hat material hardness, a broken or severe neck injury can occur. Most engineering designs, in general, have design flaws.
    Tests performed such as this justifies the need for scientists to develop safety gear as well as other technologies.

    • @jtofgc
      @jtofgc Před rokem

      That's not a failure. It's just a different test. No single test is comprehensive.

  • @Buxshot
    @Buxshot Před 4 lety +4

    Who else is here from adhd's world?

  • @derweibhai
    @derweibhai Před 3 lety +3

    I disagree with the conclusion. The aluminum hat absorbed energy. The Carbon hat would transfer that energy. If it was a puncture test, sure, the Carbon hat would be better at preventing that. This test itself doesnt show the carbon hat to be safer than the aluminum.

  • @borton6
    @borton6 Před 5 měsíci

    That’s not an accurate test. If that is simulating a brick hitting your hard hat, how high is this “brick” falling from? The “brick” doesn’t land on your hard hat and continue to apply force to your hard hat. So you have to say for example “it’s simulating a brick falling from 10 feet or 20 feet. “

  • @pandacat3874
    @pandacat3874 Před 5 lety

    Roll
    Tide
    Roll

  • @mr.stalin4070
    @mr.stalin4070 Před 4 lety

    These are WW1-WW2 doughboy helmets

  • @drpeppero3
    @drpeppero3 Před 7 lety +57

    your test is a failure. compression testing is different from impact.

    • @flailios
      @flailios Před 6 lety +6

      No it's not, the differences between the materials is what they're measuring.

    • @themib6747
      @themib6747 Před 6 lety +16

      So a rigid helmet is better than a softer one? DUH. So what happens to the brain and neck when ALL of the impact energy is transferred to the human instead of the helmet absorbing some of the energy. Broken neck and brain damage!!

    • @fartmcnuggets5247
      @fartmcnuggets5247 Před 4 lety

      Compression TESTING is a lot different that COMPRESSION testing (note the ALL CAPS)
      What is compression?
      In general compression testing is all about what happens to a file as it is compressed.
      TESTING the differences in compression rates of a file, together with its size, and how it compares to other files with the same compression rate. Compression slows down files as you compress them. That means the file ends up taking a bit longer to download and uncompress each time you load it. It also means a lot more bits are potentially lost in the compression process, which is why compression is generally applied on very small files first, then worked up to the more frequent load of larger files.
      I don't really know what COMPRESSION of FILES has to do with IMPACT of HELMETS... sorry you need to go back to school

    • @Natel164
      @Natel164 Před 4 lety +1

      @@fartmcnuggets5247 What you said made perfect sense

    • @PaulRudd1941
      @PaulRudd1941 Před 4 lety +2

      @@fartmcnuggets5247 Yo I had a stroke reading that garbage paragraph of yours.
      Maybe you need to back to school for another English class.

  • @alexanderslee
    @alexanderslee Před rokem

    Engineers measuring in Imperial pounds and inches. What a joke.

  • @alexworks9659
    @alexworks9659 Před 2 lety

    Man I hope they learned more physics and mechanism of injury and impact transferring energy. A deformation absorbs energy. A hard shell transfers. This actually show the exact opposite of what they learned.

  • @user-zf4qs2jy3n
    @user-zf4qs2jy3n Před rokem

    1:16 what a pointless test. No one give a rats ass about a hat crushed on a table. A hard hat rides on a suspension and the concern is impact loading not perceived crush weight.