1.Can we get a sample for test for our project?
Sure, please provide the detailed address, the sample will be sent to you free of charge, but the customer should pay the freight cost. When you make an order, the freight cost will be deduct from the payment.
2. What is your standard of wire checking?
We check the wire according to the national standard (GB5330-85) and our enterprise regulation about raw material defects and relative solution.
3.What is your standard of checking finished products?
We check quality of end products according to China National Standard GB/T17492-1998, equivalent ISO9044:1990, and our own standard.
4.What is the major checking items of stainless steel wire mesh?
First, we check the basic data: wire diameter, mesh counts, roll width and roll length.
Secondly, the surface condition: opening, color, flat or not and defects.
Thirdly, the edge of wire mesh should be neat and without defects.
5.What is your checking standard of reed?
The steel reed should be flat and clean, with correct wire going. The inside height, inside length and thickness should be correct.
6.What is the stainless steel material your company usually uses?
We mainly use SS304(0Cr18Ni9) SS304L(00Cr9Ni10) SA316(0Cr17Ni12Mo2)
SS316L(00Cr17Ni14Mo2), also SS410, SS4101 and SS430 sometimes.
7.What is the general packing requirement?
Stainless steel woven wire mesh is rolled around paper tube first, moisture-proof paper outside or plastic fabrics. Customized packing available.
Welded Mesh & Fence products will packaged with pallets
Other products are normally packed with wooden case,plastic bag and water-proof paper.
1. Folding Marks: | The stripe marks on wire mesh surface that cannot be erased. |
2. Broken Holes: | |
Multi-pieces broken wires at same site to form a hole in the surface. | |
3. Rusty Spots: | |
Colored changed by corrosion. Color spots in the surface. | |
4. Broken Wire: | |
Broken of single wire. | |
5. Wire Back: | |
The wire coiled, tied or twisted into the mesh forms a protruding above surface. Weft wire tied up called dead coiling. These will mostly cause the opening exceeding maximum opening range, or the wire mesh surface protruding. | |
6. Knot Bulging: | |
Warp wire not well knotted causes bulging out of the surface. | |
7. Weft Twisting: | |
Weft wire twists. | |
8. Wire Doubling: | |
Two pieces of wire or more get into one. Where there should be only one weft or warp wire, inserted two or more wires. | |
9. Mistaken Weaving: | |
Some weft wire or warp wire are woven together in error. Easily happen for diamond wire mesh. | |
10. Loosening of Wire: | |
Twisting or moving of single or some pieces of warp wire or weft wire. | |
11. Weaving In of Impurity: | Non-woven materials woven in the fabric cause deformed opening or blocking to affect the neatness of surface. The soft stuff that cannot be moved, also not protruding, may remain as defects; the hard and protruding stuff must be picked out, otherwise it may damage the neighboring wire mesh. |
12. Flattened Wire: | Weft or warp wire deformed by mechanical operation may cause deformed opening when woven into wire mesh. |
13. Density Error: | Aperture density exceeding density scope causes unqualified mathematics average value of aperture. |
14. Weft Wire Backward: | Weft wire backward may cause irregular aperture or even worse, to make the opening exceeding deviation allowance. |
15. Irregular Aperture: | Regular big or small openings between weft wires. One big opening is followed with one small opening for Plain Woven wire mesh. For Twill Woven, usually two big opening then two small, or one big then three small, etc. |
16. Bulging Out: | One site or some sites along warp direction bulges out, while the aperture does not change much. This kind of defect influences the surface quality of wire mesh. |
17. Cloud Shape Weaving: | Cloud shape bulging formed in the surface of wire mesh. Caused by weft wire pressed in a different direction. Usually occurs during weaving of medium sized wire mesh. |
18. Roll loosening: | The wire mesh has no intensive feeling, can be twisted along warp or weft wire at an angle of 45°. |
19. Other defects: | Including dirty surface, mechanical folding, rusty spots, extra roll width difference, insufficient roll length, breaking of wire mesh, etc. |