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Posted on 2026-03-27

3K 240g Carbon Fiber Fabric: The Complete B2B Product Authority Guide (2025 Edition)

3K 240g composite materials is a mid-weight woven composite material featuring 3,000-filament tows at 240 grams per square meter (gsm), offering optimal balance between drapeability, stiffness, and surface finish for automotive body panels, marine hulls, sporting goods, and aerospace secondary structures requiring Class A surface quality.

This comprehensive product guide provides technical specifications, GSM selection criteria, weave pattern comparisons, TCO analysis, processing parameters, and real-world application case studies for procurement professionals, engineers, and business decision-makers evaluating 3K 240g carbon fiber fabric solutions.


Table of Contents

  1. Product Overview: What is 3K 240g Carbon Fiber Fabric?
  2. Technical Specifications & Quality Standards
  3. GSM Selection Guide (200g vs 240g vs 300g vs 400g)
  4. Weave Pattern Options (Plain, Twill, Satin)
  5. Manufacturing Process & Quality Control
  6. TCO Cost Analysis & ROI Calculation
  7. Application Fields & Real-World Cases
  8. Processing & Fabrication Best Practices
  9. Common Defects & Quality Troubleshooting
  10. Supplier Selection & Sourcing Strategy
  11. FAQ
  12. Conclusion

1. Product Overview: What is 3K 240g Carbon Fiber Fabric?

1.1 Product Definition

3K 240g carbon fiber fabric is a woven reinforcement material constructed from 3K (3,000 filament) carbon fiber tows, with an areal weight of 240 grams per square meter (gsm) ±5%. The “3K” designation refers to the tow size (bundle count), while “240g” indicates the fabric weight per unit area – a key parameter for resin calculation, part weight prediction, and mechanical property estimation.

1.2 Key Product Characteristics

Characteristic Value Tolerance Test Standard
Fiber Tow Size 3K (3,000 filaments) ±5% ISO 10119
Areal Weight 240 g/m² ±5% (±12 gsm) ISO 3374
Filament Diameter 7 μm ±0.5 μm ISO 10119
Weave Density (Warp) 5.0-5.5 ends/cm ±0.3 ends/cm ISO 4602
Weave Density (Weft) 5.0-5.5 picks/cm ±0.3 picks/cm ISO 4602
Fabric Width 1000mm, 1270mm, 1500mm ±10mm ISO 4603
Tensile Strength (0°) ≥3,530 MPa – ISO 10618
Tensile Modulus (0°) ≥230 GPa – ISO 10618
Sizing Content 0.8-1.2% ±0.2% ISO 1887
Moisture Content <0.5% – ISO 3343

1.3 Why 240gsm is the Sweet Spot for Many Applications

The 240gsm weight class occupies a strategic position in the carbon fiber fabric portfolio:

  • Drapeability: Lighter than 300-400gsm fabrics, conforms better to complex contours and double-curved surfaces
  • Surface Finish: Finer tow spreading than heavier fabrics, produces smoother Class A surfaces for visible parts
  • Layup Flexibility: Can be stacked in multiple layers (2-6 plies) to achieve target thickness without excessive stiffness
  • Resin Infusion: Optimal permeability for vacuum infusion and RTM processes (not too dense, not too open)
  • Weight Efficiency: Lower areal weight reduces part weight while maintaining structural integrity through ply optimization

1.4 Typical Application Matrix

Industry Application Typical Ply Count Final Thickness Key Requirement
Automotive Body panels, hood, trunk lid 2-4 plies 0.8-1.5mm Class A surface, paint-ready
Marine Deck panels, interior components 3-5 plies 1.2-2.0mm Saltwater resistance, UV stability
Sporting Goods Bicycle frames, tennis rackets, hockey sticks 4-8 plies 1.5-3.0mm High stiffness-to-weight ratio
Aerospace Interior panels, fairings, access covers 2-4 plies 0.8-1.5mm Fire/smoke/toxicity compliance
Industrial Machine guards, robotic arms, covers 3-6 plies 1.2-2.5mm Chemical resistance, durability
Consumer Electronics Laptop cases, phone cases, drone frames 2-3 plies 0.6-1.0mm Aesthetic finish, EMI shielding

1.5 Product Form Options

Product Form Description Lead Time MOQ Cost Relative
Dry Fabric (Roll) Standard woven fabric, ready for hand layup or infusion 2-4 weeks 50m 1.0x (baseline)
Prepreg (Frozen) Pre-impregnated with epoxy, -18°C storage required 3-5 weeks 100m 2.5x
Pre-Cut Kits Nested pattern pieces, ready for layup 4-6 weeks 500 kits 1.8x
Unidirectional (UD) 0° fiber orientation only, maximum strength in one direction 3-5 weeks 100m 0.9x

2. Technical Specifications & Quality Standards

2.1 Mechanical Properties (Single Ply, Cured with Epoxy)

Property Value Unit Test Standard Typical Range
Tensile Strength (0°) 600-800 MPa ASTM D3039 Plain weave
Tensile Strength (90°) 600-800 MPa ASTM D3039 Balanced weave
Tensile Modulus (0°) 55-65 GPa ASTM D3039 Plain weave
Tensile Modulus (90°) 55-65 GPa ASTM D3039 Balanced weave
Compressive Strength 350-450 MPa ASTM D3410 Plain weave
Flexural Strength 800-1,000 MPa ASTM D7264 Plain weave
Flexural Modulus 50-60 GPa ASTM D7264 Plain weave
Interlaminar Shear (ILSS) 70-85 MPa ASTM D2344 Multi-ply laminate
Fracture Toughness (G1c) 250-350 J/m² ASTM D5528 Toughened epoxy

2.2 Physical Properties

Property Value Unit Test Standard
Density (Cured Laminate) 1.50-1.55 g/cm³ ASTM D792
Fiber Volume Fraction (Vf) 55-60 % ASTM D3171
Resin Content (Cured) 40-45 % ASTM D3171
Single Ply Thickness (Cured) 0.25-0.30 mm Micrometer
Coefficient of Thermal Expansion (0°) -0.5 to 2 ppm/°C ASTM E831
Coefficient of Thermal Expansion (90°) -0.5 to 2 ppm/°C ASTM E831
Thermal Conductivity (in-plane) 5-10 W/m·K ASTM D5470
Electrical Conductivity (in-plane) 10³-10&sup4; S/m ASTM D4496

2.3 Quality Acceptance Criteria

Defect Type Acceptable Limit Rejection Criteria Inspection Method
GSM Variance ±5% (±12 gsm) >±8% Weight measurement (ISO 3374)
Weave Misalignment <2° >3° Visual, protractor
Tow Spreading Gaps <1mm width >2mm continuous Visual, backlight
Broken Filaments <3 per m² >5 per m² Visual inspection
Contamination (oil, dirt) None visible Any visible Visual inspection
Edge Damage (selvage) <10mm from edge >15mm from edge Visual inspection
Moisture Content <0.5% >0.8% Moisture analyzer (ISO 3343)
Sizing Content 0.8-1.2% <0.5% or >1.5% Loss on ignition (ISO 1887)

2.4 Certification & Compliance

Certification Applicable Standard Industry Requirement Level
ISO 9001:2015 Quality Management System All industries Mandatory (supplier level)
ISO 10119 Carbon fiber – Determination of linear density All industries Material testing
ISO 10618 Carbon fiber – Determination of tensile properties All industries Material testing
AS9100 Rev D Aerospace Quality Management Aerospace Mandatory for flight parts
NADCAP Special Process Approval Aerospace Required by major OEMs
IATF 16949 Automotive Quality Management Automotive Required for Tier 1 suppliers
RoHS Compliance Restriction of Hazardous Substances Consumer, Electronics Mandatory for EU market
REACH Compliance Chemical Registration (EU) All industries (EU) Mandatory for EU market

3. GSM Selection Guide (200g vs 240g vs 300g vs 400g)

3.1 GSM Comparison Matrix

Parameter 200gsm 240gsm 300gsm 400gsm
Areal Weight 200 ±10 g/m² 240 ±12 g/m² 300 ±15 g/m² 400 ±20 g/m²
Single Ply Thickness (Cured) 0.20-0.25mm 0.25-0.30mm 0.30-0.38mm 0.40-0.50mm
Weave Density (ends/cm) 4.5-5.0 5.0-5.5 5.5-6.0 6.0-6.5
Drapeability (Rating 1-5) 5 (Excellent) 4 (Very Good) 3 (Good) 2 (Fair)
Surface Smoothness (Rating 1-5) 5 (Excellent) 4 (Very Good) 3 (Good) 2 (Fair)
Resin Infusion Speed Fast Medium-Fast Medium Slow
Minimum Bend Radius 3-5mm 5-8mm 8-12mm 12-20mm
Cost per m² $35-50 $40-60 $50-75 $65-95
Best Application Fit Complex contours, thin parts Balanced performance Structural panels Thick sections, high load

3.2 GSM Selection Decision Tree

Start → Part Thickness Requirement?
  → <1.0mm final thickness?
    → Yes → 200gsm (2-4 plies) or 240gsm (2-3 plies)
    → No → Continue
  → 1.0-2.0mm final thickness?
    → Yes → 240gsm (3-6 plies) or 300gsm (3-5 plies)
    → No → Continue
  → >2.0mm final thickness?
    → Yes → 300gsm (5-8 plies) or 400gsm (4-6 plies)
    → No → Re-evaluate design

Surface Finish Priority?
  → Class A (visible, painted)?
    → Yes → 200gsm or 240gsm (finer tow spread)
    → No → 300gsm or 400gsm acceptable

Complex Contours (double curvature)?
  → Yes → 200gsm or 240gsm (better drape)
  → No → Any GSM acceptable

Resin Infusion Process (VIP/RTM)?
  → Yes → 240gsm or 300gsm (optimal permeability)
  → No (hand layup/prepreg)?
    → Any GSM acceptable

3.3 Ply Stacking Guidelines for Target Thickness

Target Thickness 200gsm Plies 240gsm Plies 300gsm Plies 400gsm Plies Recommended
0.5-0.8mm 2-3 plies 2 plies N/A (too thick) N/A 200gsm or 240gsm
0.8-1.2mm 3-5 plies 3-4 plies 2-3 plies N/A 240gsm (optimal)
1.2-1.8mm 5-7 plies 4-6 plies 3-5 plies 3-4 plies 240gsm or 300gsm
1.8-2.5mm 7-10 plies 6-8 plies 5-7 plies 4-6 plies 300gsm or 400gsm
>2.5mm >10 plies (inefficient) >8 plies (labor-intensive) 7-10 plies 6-8 plies 400gsm or hybrid

3.4 Cost per mm Thickness Comparison

GSM Cost per m² Ply Thickness Cost per mm Thickness Relative Efficiency
200gsm $42/m² 0.22mm $191/mm 1.15x (less efficient)
240gsm $50/m² 0.28mm $179/mm 1.0x (baseline)
300gsm $62/m² 0.34mm $182/mm 1.02x
400gsm $80/m² 0.45mm $178/mm 0.99x (slightly better)

Analysis: While 400gsm offers marginally better cost-per-thickness, 240gsm provides superior balance of drapeability, surface finish, and processing flexibility for most applications.


4. Weave Pattern Options (Plain, Twill, Satin)

4.1 Weave Pattern Comparison

Parameter Plain Weave (1×1) Twill Weave (2×2) Twill Weave (4×4) Satin Weave (5H) Satin Weave (8H)
Weave Pattern Over 1, under 1 Over 2, under 2 Over 4, under 4 Over 4, under 1 (5 harness) Over 7, under 1 (8 harness)
Visual Appearance Checkerboard, tight Diagonal pattern Wider diagonal Smooth, minimal pattern Very smooth, nearly uniform
Crimp (Fiber Waviness) High (˜3-4%) Medium (˜2-3%) Low (˜1-2%) Very Low (˜0.5-1%) Lowest (˜0.3-0.5%)
Mechanical Properties Baseline (100%) +5-10% +10-15% +15-20% +20-25%
Drapeability Good Very Good Excellent Excellent Best
Surface Smoothness Good (visible pattern) Very Good Very Good Excellent (Class A) Best (Class A+)
Stability (Shear) Excellent (locked) Good Moderate Moderate (requires care) Poor (shifts easily)
Cost Relative 1.0x (baseline) 1.1x 1.2x 1.4x 1.6x
Best Application General purpose, flat panels Automotive, marine Sporting goods, complex shapes Aerospace, Class A surfaces Premium visible parts

4.2 Plain Weave (1×1) – Workhorse of Industry

Characteristics:

  • Most common weave pattern for 240gsm fabric
  • Maximum stability during handling and layup
  • Balanced properties in 0° and 90° directions
  • Classic checkerboard appearance (visible after clear coat)

Advantages:

  • Lowest cost among weave options
  • Easy to handle, minimal distortion during layup
  • Good resin impregnation (open structure)
  • Widely available from all suppliers

Limitations:

  • Higher crimp reduces mechanical properties vs twill/satin
  • Visible weave pattern may not suit all aesthetic requirements
  • Less conformable to complex contours than twill/satin

Typical Applications: Flat panels, machine guards, industrial covers, non-visible structural parts.

4.3 Twill Weave (2×2, 4×4) – Balanced Performance

Characteristics:

  • Diagonal pattern (recognizable “carbon fiber look”)
  • Better drapeability than plain weave
  • Improved mechanical properties (lower crimp)
  • Popular for visible automotive and marine parts

Advantages:

  • Aesthetically appealing diagonal pattern
  • Good balance of properties, cost, and processability
  • Conforms better to moderate contours
  • Widely used, good supplier availability

Limitations:

  • More prone to distortion during handling than plain weave
  • Slightly higher cost (+10-20%)
  • Requires more careful layup technique

Typical Applications: Automotive body panels, marine deck components, bicycle frames, visible sporting goods.

4.4 Satin Weave (5H, 8H) – Premium Performance

Characteristics:

  • Smooth surface with minimal visible pattern
  • Lowest crimp, highest mechanical properties
  • Excellent drapeability for complex shapes
  • Premium pricing, limited supplier availability

Advantages:

  • Superior surface finish (ideal for Class A painted parts)
  • Maximum mechanical properties (15-25% improvement over plain)
  • Best conformability to complex double-curvature surfaces
  • Reduced print-through in painted finishes

Limitations:

  • Highest cost (+40-60% vs plain weave)
  • Fabric shifts easily during layup (requires careful handling)
  • Longer lead times (specialty item)
  • Requires skilled layup technicians

Typical Applications: Aerospace fairings, premium automotive exterior panels, high-end sporting goods, complex molded parts.

4.5 Weave Selection Decision Matrix

Application Priority Plain Weave Twill 2×2 Twill 4×4 Satin 5H/8H
Lowest Cost ✔ Best Acceptable Moderate Poor
Maximum Strength Poor Good Very Good ✔ Best
Class A Surface Poor Good Very Good ✔ Best
Complex Contours Poor Good Very Good

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