Dn

DH

09/10/2007 3:52 PM

What Does Melamine Edging Tape Contain?

Hello,

I would like to find out what pre-glued melamine edging tape
contains. In particular does it include melamine, or is it simply
designed to match melamine?

My potential application is a little unusual. I wish to supply a bath
safety rail to a customer, however the manufacturer does not protect a
swinging bolt for shipping, and each enameled steel rail has an
approximately 0.5x0.5" patch of lightly chipped enamel on an inside
surface where the bolt strikes during transit. I would like to neatly
cover this portion in a lasting manner and am considering stainless
steel tape, and melamine edging tape, perhaps with epoxy glue. The
tape must conform to a 1" diameter cyclinder.

If I use a a heat sensitive glue tape the heat dissipation of the
enameled steel rail may be a problem. I am looking for long lifetime,
no mildew problem etc.

Thank you,

D.Hughes


This topic has 2 replies

b

in reply to DH on 09/10/2007 3:52 PM

10/10/2007 2:21 PM

I don't think melamine tape will hold up in the long term. there are
different kinds- most of them are vinyl- and all are made to adhere to
flat surfaces in dry applications.

the chip is the manufacturer's problem. make them supply you with an
un-chipped item.

Lr

"Leon"

in reply to DH on 09/10/2007 3:52 PM

09/10/2007 6:17 PM


"DH" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hello,
>
> I would like to find out what pre-glued melamine edging tape
> contains. In particular does it include melamine, or is it simply
> designed to match melamine?

Iron on Melamine tape is made of melamine with a heat sensitive adhesive on
the back side. That said, there are many tapes that are made of PVC also.


>
> If I use a a heat sensitive glue tape the heat dissipation of the
> enameled steel rail may be a problem. I am looking for long lifetime,
> no mildew problem etc.


The tape adheres rather quickly. I use my wife's iron on the cotton setting
to heat the tape while it is on the surface that it will be attached to. 3
or 4 seconds is all about all the time you need.
That said, and something you may want to look into. My wife is a quilter
and on some projects has to use a special Teflon barrier between her iron
and the material. This Teflon sheet barrier is about 18" square and
prevents the iron fron scorching the material. I use it also between the
iron and the Melamine.





> Thank you,
>
> D.Hughes
>


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