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View Full Version : pic: Team 2614's Cracked Plexi


SlaminSwimster
13-07-2008, 22:28
[cdm-description=photo]31647[/cdm-description]

JESTER357
13-07-2008, 22:29
what an amazing time. i remember u bringing that up to me and saying there is no way that happened

Andy Baker
13-07-2008, 22:43
One of the ways to tell the difference between acrylic (aka: Plexiglas) and polycarbonate (aka: Lexan) is the color of the edges.

Acrylic has a white edge.
Polycarbonate has a blue edge.

The producers of polycarbonate resin call this a "blueness index", if I recall correctly.

On this picture, many of the edges appear white. I only see blue edges where there are 2 layers of plastic. My guess is that we are looking at an acrylic sheet. And, of course, acrylic is much more brittle than polycarbonate.

Look at these two pages on www.matweb.com:

Extruded Acrylic (http://www.matweb.com/search/DataSheet.aspx?MatGUID=632572aeef2a4224b5ac8fbd4f1 b6f77)
Extruded Polycarbonate (http://www.matweb.com/search/DataSheet.aspx?MatGUID=501acbb63cbc4f748faa7490884 cdbca)

If you check out the "mechanical properties" of these two materials, they look somewhat similar in their strengths and properties, until you see the "Izod Impact, Notched" rating:

Acrylic has a rating of 0.3-1.1 ft-lb/in
Polycarbonate has a rating of 0.9 - 18.0 ft-lb/in

The higher value of the polycarbonate means that it can take an impact hit much better than acrylic.

Andy B.

IKE
14-07-2008, 10:44
Yeah the plexi(acrylic) vs. lexan(polycarb) mistake is a bad one.

We had some high stress pieces of 3/16 lexan on or robot this year that began to break after the first regional. We replaced them with 3/8" ??? Clear stuff. They snapped in the first match at the second regional. Turns out they were plexi.

The solution ended being going back to the thinner lexan and paying closer attention to surface cracks. A bandsaw will leave gouges perpendicular to the material thickness where-as a dremel sanding drum will make the gouges parallel to the thickness and thus slightly tougher.

Noticing that this looks like a non-structural body panel, here is a little secret:
McMaster Carr sells polycarbonate film (0.02-0.04"). Attached with velcor, this makes very puncture resistant "armor" without adding much weight. Be careful if you cut sharp inside corners into it as this can initiate a tear quite easily. Also, going much less that 0.020" is pretty thin stuff and thus not terribly strong.

Dan Petrovic
14-07-2008, 13:44
One of my friends was at a hardware store when someone asked an employee what the difference between Plexiglass and Lexan was.

The employee didn't say a word. He grabbed a hammer, a sheet of Plexiglass and struck it. The plexiglass shattered. He grabbed a sheet of Lexan and hammered on it repeatedly with no effects.

That was an amusing story.

EricH
14-07-2008, 15:15
One year, 330 had a plastic-encased robot. Lexan wedges (pre-no-wedge rules), and a tower that had thinner Lexan on 3 sides and acrylic on the fourth. We replaced one panel all season. One good hit from a robot at our first regional of the year, going up a wedge, broke it. After that, there wasn't acrylic on the robot...

IKE
14-07-2008, 16:03
One of my friends was at a hardware store when someone asked an employee what the difference between Plexiglass and Lexan was.

The employee didn't say a word. He grabbed a hammer, a sheet of Plexiglass and stuck it. The plexiglass shattered. He grabbed a sheet of Lexan and hammered on it repeatedly with no effects.

That was an amusing story.

That is the exact procedure I recommended to another mentor on our team on how to distinguish acrylic from LEXAN.

smurfgirl
14-07-2008, 18:24
We had a plexiglas cover over our electronics board (mounted vertically at the back of the robot) on our 2006 robot. In that position, it naturally took a lot of hits, and it looked like that after the first few matches... we learned our acrylic vs. polycarbonate lesson that way, too.
Everyone else gave you good advice, so I won't repeat it.

R.C.
14-07-2008, 18:58
Our Shop teacher laughed and put each one through a table saw. The acrylic shot out and cracked and polycarbonate was cut with no problems.

Akash Rastogi
14-07-2008, 20:30
Our Shop teacher laughed and put each one through a table saw. The acrylic shot out and cracked and polycarbonate was cut with no problems.

umm...don't do that ever again. lol

R.C.
14-07-2008, 21:13
Yeah we weren't planning to, but we had safety glasses on =).

Thanks for the reminder

Daniel_LaFleur
15-07-2008, 07:49
One of my friends was at a hardware store when someone asked an employee what the difference between Plexiglass and Lexan was.

The employee didn't say a word. He grabbed a hammer, a sheet of Plexiglass and stuck it. The plexiglass shattered. He grabbed a sheet of Lexan and hammered on it repeatedly with no effects.

That was an amusing story.

This was the exact test I showed my team this past year.

1 shot with a hammer and they were convinced that polycarbonate is the way to go.

Dan Petrovic
15-07-2008, 11:28
...are there any situations where acrylic is more useful than polycarbonate?

unless the part is designed to shatter, of course.

Francis-134
15-07-2008, 13:29
While I'm not an expert on plastics, I have found that the only advantage to plexi over Lexan is cost (a cursory inspection of Wikipedia confirms this). Plexi tends to cost much less than Lexan.

For example, the large tank's viewing screen at the Atlanta Aquarium is made of acrylic not Lexan because it's never going to come under any significant shock loads and will never risk fractuing. If it were made of Lexan, it would probably cost MUCH more money.

SlaminSwimster
15-07-2008, 15:18
Yeah we definitely learned our lesson about plexi. But a broken shield in exchange for winning the Pittsburgh Regional- totally worth it!!!!:)

Tom I
15-07-2008, 15:39
While I'm not an expert on plastics, I have found that the only advantage to plexi over Lexan is cost (a cursory inspection of Wikipedia confirms this). Plexi tends to cost much less than Lexan.

Yeah my team tried weighing this benifit against the disadvantages in the 2007 build season. we needed 3 large shields for our robot sides, so we decided that we would go with 1/8" Acrylic to make them for cost benifits. Luckily we were able to fix this mistake before ship, when the shields started cracking while simply practicing! We replaced them with 1/8" Lexan, and we never had a problem durring the season.

Our team has a motto... although it is not true, it is still funny... "Lexan NEVER breaks!"

Akash Rastogi
15-07-2008, 17:55
Yeah we definitely learned our lesson about plexi. But a broken shield in exchange for winning the Pittsburgh Regional- totally worth it!!!!:)

Congrats on that btw. highly impressive for a rookie team to win a regional.Come to the NJ regional next year:D

R.C.
15-07-2008, 19:25
Congrats on that btw. highly impressive for a rookie team to win a regional.Come to the NJ regional next year:D

Yes it is, congrats again from 1323

SlaminSwimster
17-07-2008, 17:14
Thanks 4 the congrats guys!!!

Cuog
18-07-2008, 00:10
We also played a fun prank on some of the freshmen on my team. I brought out two pieces of clear plastic, handed one to them and told them to try and break it, I took the other and bent and snapped it. They were all afraid of me for a little while till someone explained the different between the piece I gave them(lexan) and the piece I had(acrylic)