Hand Lay Up

Hand lay-up is a simple open-mold composite process where dry technical textile reinforcements are manually placed in a mold and impregnated with resin to form layered structures. It directly integrates technical textiles like woven, nonwoven, and multiaxial fabrics, whose orientation and structure define the final strength, stiffness, and performance of the composite.

Step by Step Guide

  • Mold preparation with release agent
  • Placement of dry textile layers
  • Manual resin application (brush/roller)
  • Air removal & consolidation
  • Layer build-up to required thickness
  • Curing and final finishing

Material Used

Fibers:

  • Glass fiber (E-glass)
  • Carbon fiber
  • Aramid (Kevlar)
  • Natural fibers (flax, jute)

Fabric Forms:

  • Chopped strand mat (CSM)
  • Woven roving
  • Biaxial / multiaxial fabrics
  • Knitted fabrics

Resins:

  • Polyester
  • Epoxy
  • Vinyl ester

Advantages

  • Low cost (minimal equipment required)
  • Suitable for large and complex shapes
  • Flexible design and material selection
  • Easy to implement and modify

Limitations

  • Labor intensive and skill-dependent
  • Inconsistent quality (manual process)
  • Low production rate
  • Higher resin consumption (lower efficiency)

Applications & End Products

Marine

Boat hulls, decks, yachts

Wind Energy

Turbine blades, nacelles

Automotive

Body panels, fairings

Construction

Roofing panels, structural components

Industrial

Storage tanks, pipes, ducts

Aerospace

Non-critical structural parts

Selection Criteria

Choose hand lay-up when:

  • Large parts with low production volume are required
  • Complex shapes need flexible textile placement
  • Cost constraints limit advanced processes
  • High automation is not necessary

Material Selection:

  • Complex shapes → Woven / knitted fabrics
  • High strength → Carbon / multiaxial fabrics
  • Low cost → Glass fiber + polyester resin