A resin or composite backing can distort a thermoformed shell through cure heat, cure shrinkage, uneven thickness, or poor adhesion. The shell may warp during cure, print through reinforcement texture, or blister later in service.
The peak temperature at the plastic interface depends on resin chemistry, catalyst level, batch size, laminate sequence, ambient conditions, and heat removal. One universal exotherm limit is not suitable for every polymer and resin system.
Control the backing process
Temperature should be measured at the shell-resin interface during representative production. Resin layers should be applied in a sequence that limits heat concentration and unbalanced shrinkage. The shell needs stable support until cure is sufficiently complete.
Surface preparation and material compatibility must be validated for moisture and service exposure. Changing to a different resin family without testing can alter adhesion, shrinkage, and chemical attack even when heat generation is lower.
