So you think your coffee is strong? Wait until you have tried your coffee cup!
"A Honeycomb core is an array of hollow columns made of sheet material which is used to separate the two facings of a sandwich structure".
So why not make one of Coffee Cups and enter the Coffee Cup Challenge?
This I'ble will show you how to make a honeycomb panel as a building block for your future projects. If you like it, don't forget to vote for me!
Note
Where I live, paper cups are somewhat rare, so I have merely made a beam and tested it.
My project has ended by testing this beam. If you want to take it to the next level or if you have an awesome idea, feel free to use this information and even post it in the Coffee Cup Challenge as well (some credits would be nice though).
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It's a great misconception that you need fancy materials to fabricate composite materials. Nature is full of extraordinary examples.
You will need:
* 45 coffee cups
* two triplex strips of 90 x 20 cm (thickness 2 mm).
* Glue.
The dimension of the strip was more or less determined by the fact that I could only get hold of 45 cups (3 rows of 15 cups).










































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I am looking forward to your next project, whatever it may be.
In the discussions on the main page, you can find a discussion about using aluminium cans (Coke).
Show us the results when you're done!
(alternatively, use Gorilla Glue, enter the Gorilla Glue competition and win some of the prizes...)
However, I think your suggestion could work and your point is that there is room for improvement (as stated by myself in step 4 of this I'ble).
Only thing is, currently I don't have the time nor the resources to take it that step further (hope that someone else will. you?). That's why I made the remarks in step 1 about the contest. I'll be happy to contribute.
Oh yeah, air is one of the best insulators around!
Could one just use corrugated cardboard?
If so, coroplast would also work (corrugated extrusions of plastic) but it is more expensive. $10 for an 8' x 4' sheet here, from a sign shop.
you can make the faces stronger by doubling the face, or by cutting the faces on the bias with the corrugation at right angles to each other.
I guess you could use cardboard, just as long it doesn't get wet (but then the same applies for the cups!). The skin of the sandwich panel must withstand tension and compression. So the cardboard may not be too thin.
Coroplast might work as well, but seems a bit expensive? (but will paper adhere to plastic?) If money is no problem, I would get rid of the coffee cups all together, but then that's not so much fun!
I can imagine building a 8' tall frame using studs the same width as the height of the cup (If cup is a medium, it will be xx inches tall, therefore your stud should be a 2 X xx inches wide stud.).
Put studs on 4' centers. (4' is probably too wide actually. I think, you would have to place them just inside the width of the plywood so when you are actually attaching the panels to the framing of the house you can nest the panel into the framed wall bay and nail the existing frame to the panel frame.)
Temporarily screw a sheet of 4x8 OSB onto the frame and flip it over so the OSB (Plywood) is on the bottom of the frame. Lay the frame at a slanted angle (the laying angle of a drafting table, say).
The angle would allow you to stack cups onto the entire field of the plywood between the studs with cups.
Next, you would take a second sheet of OSB and, using a roller or air pressurized sprayer(not disposable aerosol type, but the kind used in finishing booths at furniture and body shops), coat the ply with laminate adhesive according to manufacturers instructions.
Apply this sheet (when it is good and tacky and ready) to the frame. Screw it permanently to the studs. Ideally (I'm making this up as I'm typing, so bear with me here) Ideally the contact of the cups onto the glued surface would be pretty uniform. Maybe a stud that is just a hair narrower than the height of the cup would allow for the adequate uniform pressure to contact all the cups. I guess you'd have to be careful not to crush them, though.
Next, you would flip the entire 4x8 coffee cup "sandwich" over so that the adhesive coated plywood is on the bottom.
Remove the first sheet and coat appropriately. Re-attach to frame, and VOILA! You've just made your own Coffee Cup SIP! (Oh, (S)tructural (I)nsulated (P)anel)
The load is carried on the studs. I think...By all means, use at your own risk... Any engineers out there should probably put me in my place here.
I think the real SIPS have the studs a small distance from the edge of the ply, which allows them to nest with a second stud already attached to the bottom plate of the wall (the horizontal 2X___" that is already fixed to the floor of the structure)
Any thoughts?
Just a thought.
Great Instructable!!
Thanks for the reply. Guess this gives me the summer project I was wondering about. We'll see. I would really like somebody to tell me if this sort of thing would be dangerous at all. I'm concerned about structural soundness primarily, and fire secondarily. Anybody???
By the way...you should have definitely beat the coffee cake entry and winner. I didn't read any of the comments on the thing because I didn't think it was all that great of an idea. Now that I've looked at it, I'm wondering if the wax on the inside of the cup wouldn't enter into my reproductive system, or some other remarkably unfortunate place!!!
I'll start collecting cups and stuff for the SIP.
I believe voting is possible from May 10th on, but I'm not sure how it works (if you will see a button).
For a table-top, you would only need the top surface to be transparent.
Well done.
WORD.
WORD!