Is carbon fiber more difficult to work with than aluminum? A little enlightenment please
Fiber is a time consuming process, but it's also a significant bit harder to work with. You need all new tools: bits n mill bits etc and they wear out fast. They need to be replaced really often or they catch n snag and for simplicity sake rip/unravel the fiber.
It's similar to titanium in that way, sometimes a $100 bit only lasts ten seconds then explodes, and that is best case scenario, if it doesn't explode it usually gets stuck in the hole, that costs a week and $80 to get the bit out.
With titanium it's not like I can just buy one of each bit I need. You need a few bits for each hole, and they wear out and break super fast. You have to start small and get a pilot hole going then you go bigger then up to large enough to fit a boring bar inside to open the hole up to final size. Besides the cost that's three or four times I have to drill the same hole, change bits, reset the mill, then I have to run the boring bar up n down ten to twenty times. Every one of those steps is done with the cooling system going, which I hate, but also costs a little money, and takes time waiting for things to cool down between cuts. As far as mill work goes titanium is much more than just a pain in the asz. [emoji4]