Article

The aerospace engineering industry and the composites

Topic: Business DevelopmentPublished May 10, 2012

Reader stats

371 views

Article rating

No ratings yet

Reader rating appears publicly after enough eligible article ratings.

Rate this article

Sign in to rate this article.

Sign in to rate this article

The aerospace engineering industry has been known to used a respectable volume of composite materials since the Sixties for the conception of aircrafts for air transportation. Initially, commercial planes that went to volume production were mainly built from steel, aluminium and titanium alloys. The addition of composites in the aerospace sector has made for more efficient, safer, and more economical production of today’s aircrafts. The last four decades have seen the aerospace industry face a kind of revolution leading to many composites implemented for helicopter and aircraft production. Fibreglass composites were the early composite materials to be implemented by the aerospace industry, followed by two other composites, i.e. carbon fibre and aramid fibre, in the early seventies. The main applications of composite materials for aircraft and helicopter interior parts include the conception of fuselage fairing panels, fuselage skin panels, and instrument panels. Some of the principal advantages to use composites are the rather low conception and installation expenses, in addition to lower toxicity and better resistance to fire. One great innovation that allows implementation of composite materials is the possibity to manufacture complex parts in one piece (especially through thermoforming), hence notably decreasing various costs related to machining and assembly process. Through research and innovation of aerospace engineering companies, the evolution of composites has facilitated parts to be built and/or cast with distinct physical and chemical properties and characteristics, those parts dedicated for specific uses and complying to the specific needs of the industry. Besides offering the possibility to built long lasting and reliable parts, this type of material also provides excellent protection against corrosion. The considerable enthusiasm demonstrate by aircraft manufacturers for those impressive composites is continuous. Whether for designing aircraft interior components and parts or structural parts, composites made by plastic components manufacturer provide the industry with obvious advantages and possibilities when combined to conventional alloys and materials.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

Artificial intelligence continues to dominate business conversations, but enthusiasm alone does not guarantee results. While many companies rush to adopt AI in hopes of gaining a competitive edge, a large number of initiatives still fall short. The problem is rarely the technology itself. More often, failure happens because organizations approach AI without the structure, readiness, and discipline required for long-term success. AI projects do not fail because the technology

March 4, 2026

Article

AI Avatar Development: Real Innovation or Just Hype? In today’s hyperconnected world, attention is currency. To stand out, brands can no longer settle for flashy features or surface-level engagement. They need to build meaningful, scalable, and personalized experiences. Enter AI avatars: digital humans that are revolutionizing communication by bringing lifelike presence to virtual interactions. Imagine a team member who never takes a coffee break, speaks ten languages fluen

February 27, 2026

Article

The Quiet Engine Behind Every Connection Most people think of telecom services as towers, signals, and mobile data moving invisibly through the air. Yet behind every call that connects and every message that reaches its destination, there is another system quietly working in the background. That system is the call center. While customers often interact with telecom companies only when something goes wrong, these centers operate constantly, guiding problems toward solutions an

February 23, 2026

Article

Introduction The solar industry once believed that collecting as many leads as possible was the fastest path to growth. Marketing teams focused on filling databases with names, phone numbers, and email addresses. At first, the numbers looked promising. Dashboards showed rising interest and more inquiries than ever before. Yet behind the scenes, many companies began to notice a quiet problem. Revenue growth did not match the flood of leads. Sales teams felt overwhelmed, conver

February 6, 2026