This looks like a foam "tool" produced by Janicki Industries in Washington. They make their own CNC machines to carve designs into foam and the foams are used as sort of molds for forming carbon composite fabric and epoxy into the shape. The result is hulls for missiles, boats, and airliners (Boeing Dreamliner 787 for example).
Pretty sure a lathe can get alot better than + - 0.02
syncrobus90 5 months ago
I agree, looks like a nosecone maybe for an aircraft engine ,great music,hard to beat the beatles :) Thanks for posting :)
sneakystaffie 1 year ago
Can I get a refund on the last 7 minutes of my life, please ? Yawn !... and the end result was not entirely dissimilar to what 'they' started with.
2Toledos 2 years ago
Why didn't you turn it? on a lathe i mean
thecoolsundar 2 years ago
You would need a really big lathe, and it would not be as precise as needed. The part was checked with a laser and was + or - less than 20 thousands.
a4near 2 years ago
It's a big tit
elvisjonesus 3 years ago 6
This looks like a foam "tool" produced by Janicki Industries in Washington. They make their own CNC machines to carve designs into foam and the foams are used as sort of molds for forming carbon composite fabric and epoxy into the shape. The result is hulls for missiles, boats, and airliners (Boeing Dreamliner 787 for example).
elankeisler 3 years ago
What is this?
civillaser 3 years ago