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Glass-Fibre Directory and Databook is a comprehensive listing of
all commercially available glass-fibres, whether used for
reinforcement, insulation or filtration. Full details - addresses,
telephone and facsimile numbers - of the respective manufacturers,
their affiliates, licensees and subsidiaries, agents and
distributors are provided, together with tabulated specifications
of the materials each offers. The volume is therefore an invaluable
source of information for all those concerned in any way with
glass-fibres in both the industrial and academic worlds. It enables
professionals such as design engineers, consultants, purchase
managers and specifiers to make an optimum choice from the wide
range of materials now available so that the properties are more
effectively tailored to both the application and the performance
specification required.
PURPOSE Since the publication of the previous, Fifth Edition of
this volume in 1991, the 'advanced' sector of the world-wide
composites industry in particular, has seen many company changes in
reorganisation, realignment and ownership. These changes have
affected the raw material suppliers as well as those moulding the
finished product. Changes in the demands of the aerospace, defence
and allied industries have largely been the cause. That situation
has been particularly true for those manufacturing and distributing
reinforcement fibres and fabrics, necessitating this comprehensive
Sixth Edition revision. However publication is also timely, because
a major and important consequence is the better consideration now
being given by the 'commercial' market sector, to the use - and
advantages - of some of the carbon, aramid and other
high-performance reinforcements, described within these pages.
Although supplying at a much lower finished component cost than
applies for the aerospace and defence markets, the total tonnage
output answering the typically lower-performance requirements of
the 'commercial' sector, is higher by many factors. Overall
therefore, the summation of output tonnage and price, will continue
to favour the latter. Nevertheless this 'commercial' market sector
must, albeit slowly, ultimately benefit to a marked degree from an
increasing technology spin-off, promoted to an extent somewhat
earlier than might otherwise have been expected, by the noted
changes in market place demand.
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