I went down a bit of a rabbit hole yesterday. Follow me for a minute:
1. I noticed that carbon fiber tubes are very cheap on ebay. I also found some american manufacturers that look like they are also making some tubes for REALLY reasonable rates. Like not scrap metal cheap but could be used on a challenge car reasonable. (for example, this $70 piece could make both axles for my fiat challenge project with tube to spare https://dragonplate.com/Braided-Carbon-Fiber-Round-Tubing-1-ID-x-48)
2. I got a bit engineer-y (watch out) and looked up some formulas for torsion of shafts: https://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/torsion-shafts-d_947.html
3. I looked up some carbon-fiber driveshafts specs from aftermarket companies like QA1.
4. I looked at the 3M website and learned that they recommend DP420NS exopy adhesive for CF to metal joints, and it has approximate shear strength of 4500 PSI when cured. This stuff is also not going to break a challenge budget.
Here's where I am:
1. I'm considering buying a couple tubes and some epoxy and doing some torque tests.
2. Engineering calculations using Modulus of Rigidity of steel (11 Mpa) vs CF (33 Mpa) shows that a CF shaft of 1.09" OD and 1.00" ID should have a very similar overall strength to that of a stock 240sx solid steel axle of 1.11" OD.
3. Looks like CF driveshaft manufacturers are a little more conservative with their modulus of rigidity. If I take a 3.5" driveshaft in steel with .083 wall thickness and assume* it has about the same torque handling as the same companys' 3.25" driveshaft in CF with .120 in wall thickness, I get that the manufacturer is using a modulus of rigidity for CF to be about 80% of that of the steel. This 80% is based on a *big assumption, but it gives me a least a good feeling about being within the right ballpark.
4. I'm much less sure of the calculations surrounding the adhesives. I guess the process is to basically glue the metal fitting into the end of the CF tube, but I don't know how to calculate about how much surface area I might need. I can calculate surface area of the metal-CF joint and multiply by the PSI of the glue, but I'm not sure how to figure out what that number needs to be. I assume that CF driveshafts have a metal fitting glued into each end and those fittings are probably about 3 inches deep by 3 inches diameter or so. So they would have about 30 square inches of glue area. This is where the 1 inch tube really hurts, since the diameter is small I'd be looking at maybe 10 square inches of glue area.
So, my questions:
In a very lightweight (1500 lb) car with a motorcycle engine (low torque high HP), am I crazy to try and make CF axles by taking the CVs I currently have, cutting the shafts, and turning the metal down to just fit into the CF tube and then gluing them in? I have to convert nissan inners to fiat outers already so there will already be cutting and fab involved no matter the material.
Does it sound possible to take a broken 350z driveshaft (did you know they are all CF from the factory?) cut the broken CF away, find a metal sleeve that fits just inside the ID of the CF, and re-glue it and re-use it in a shorter application? Not shooting for thousands of HP btw.