I found a material data sheet on Stabil Core, which gives an idea of what it is composed of. It appears to be made from a thin layer of carbon cloth with the fibers at 0 & 90 degrees, followed by a much heavier layer of 0-90 glass cloth, and finally another thin layer of 0-90 carbon cloth. I don’t have a sample of this, but if I did, then I’d cut off a small piece and burn away the resin to see how the fibers are oriented. It will help torsional stability most if the strands are oriented at 45 degrees relative to its length, but it doesn’t seem to be made this way according to Bear Paw’s description. If the strands are oriented at 0-90 degrees, then it will help prevent splits, but not live up to its potential for improving torsional stability.
The stiffness or Elastic modulus of Stabil Core is about 1/3rd that of Gordon’s Unidirectional carbon, and the tensile strength is about 1/5th that of Gordon’s unidirectional carbon. In addition, the density of the Stabil Core is much higher than unidirectional carbon fiber, almost as high as regular glass! I am not sure why this is like this given Bearpaw’s low published value of fiber volume at 25%. I would consider this a very sub-par material based on BearPaw’s published data. Bearpaw may be using the glass in this composite to help keep it from splitting apart during handling, but this adds dead weight too.
http://www.bearpaw-blog.de/bilder/bearpaw-stabilcore.pdfAlan