16/04/2026
Many composite “failures” don’t start in the material lab. They start in the CAD file.
Too often, a metal part is defined first — geometry, thickness, and load paths are locked in. Then, late in the process, the question comes: “Which composite can replace it?” That approach is where things begin to fall apart.
Composites are not drop-in replacements. A carbon fibre part with unchanged geometry will not simply match the stiffness of its metal counterpart. Tweaking layups or adding ribs may help — but only within the limits of a design that was never meant for composites in the first place.
From there, the conversation usually shifts to higher-performance (and higher-cost) materials… without ever solving the real problem. This isn’t a material issue. It’s a design approach issue.
Replacing metal with composites requires a shift in thinking — and it needs to happen early:
→ What performance is actually required?
→ Where is stiffness truly critical?
→ How can geometry evolve when we’re no longer bound to metal design rules?
→ What additional value can composites bring — weight reduction, part integration, corrosion resistance, smarter manufacturing?
When these questions are asked too late, projects become a series of compromises. When they’re asked from the start, they unlock real innovation.
At Advanced Fibre Form, we don’t treat composites as substitutes.
We design them as solutions.
By aligning material behaviour, geometry, and manufacturing from day one, we deliver components that are not only lighter — but smarter, more efficient, and better suited to their application.
Because with composites, performance isn’t just in the material.
It’s in the design.