“I am proud and happy that the industry, in cooperation with Buskerud County Municipality, has established a complete educational pathway for composites here in Kongsberg.” Plastic and composites are materials for the future. Development will head in the direction of self-healing plastic materials and materials that change shape in response to strain. Moreover, carbon fiber composites will become important in 3D printing”, Bråthen told the young audience.
A MODERN LABORATORY
Educational programmes from the upper secondary school and up to university level are now being integrated with each other. This national commitment to the field of plastic and composites is being crowned by a new laboratory at the Krona Center for Culture and Knowledge in Kongsberg.
The laboratory is to be used by pupils and students from upper secondary schools, technical schools and college universities. Funding comes from the industry and Buskerud County Municipality. KONGSBERG have contributed with an autoclave oven used for curing composites.
“The composites lab at Krona will be one of the most important tools in acquiring knowledge and skills within the field of plastic and composites”, according to the brochure from Kongsberg upper secondary school.
IT COULD BE FUN
The visit at Arsenalet included a guided tour of the 30,000 square metre factory premises. Fredrik Hvamb, who is an apprentice at the K-Tech training center, demonstrated what is like to work with a composite material.
“You have to be thorough and concentrate all the time. Sloppiness is not permitted. When you add layers of composite over each other, it is important that no air gets in-between them. If this happens, the composite will not be approved and has to be discarded”, 19-year-old Hvamb told the attending youth who were mostly aged between 15 and 16.
Two of the pupils visiting the composites factory from Notodden upper secondary school this Wednesday were Mikael Moen Rønningen and Silje Josefine Larsen. Both of them now know a lot more about plastic and composites.