Ensign Re-read wrote:The examples are not comparable.
C-130 is metal framed cargo plane (easy to re-enforce, maintain & repair).
Osprey is (largely) carbon framed troop transport (not so easy for same).
{Yes, that is an oversimplification.}
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CF fuselages are built just like Aluminum ones. The ONLY difference is that there are not thousands upon thousands of rivets. Epoxy is used instead. Sure you CAN use rivets and bolts, but there is no reason to. How do you think they do all repairs on CF planes... Rivets, bolts, screws and glue. They do not "lay-up" individual layers.
It is called standard cross section forms. Only in the wing for torsional rigidity purposes are stringers/beams laid up expressly with unique fiber orientations. A round tube? No. A barrel mandrel is used for the EXTERIOR skin thickness. Stringers are then glued on after piece is pulled from the barrel mandrel.
CF is far superior for maintenance. It does not require any at all. Ever. You do not have grounding problems for instance from corrosion. If layed up properly, far less prone to cracking than aluminum. It fatigue life is vastly superior to that of aluminum as well.
In short a CF structure should last easily 2X longer than an equivalent aluminum bird for the same weight. There is a very simple reason airliners were lining up around the block to get their hands on the 787 and only when the line was seen to be wrapped around the block twice that folks decided to venture over to airbus and check out their A350. Of course the A350 is mostly CF as well, but a lot of the very expensive hard maintenance area for checks "C" and "D" are still aluminum instead of CF which effectively negates going to CF in the first place.