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2 Inches X 30 Yards Waterproof No Residue Heavy Duty Gaff Tape For Stage Cables
heavy duty gaff cloth tape is mainly used for carton taping, carpet installation, heavy duty bondingm, cabin sealing, wall decoration, joining and fixing of metal parts ect. Suitable for cambered surface sticking like shoe making and tannery.
Product Features
Brown Gaffer Tape is strong yet can be torn by hand, so no cutting
tools are necessary, and it can easily be ripped into narrower
strips when desired.
The synthetic adhesive typically leaves no residue and will
generally not damage most surfaces when it is removed.
Gaffer tape is high waterproof tape, matte surface finish. It is
also high tack and tensile strength. Highly conformable.
While sometimes confused with duct tape, gaffer tape differs in the
composition of both the backing, which is made from fabric as
opposed to vinyl or other plastics, and the adhesive, which is more
resistant to heat and more easily removed without damaging the
surface to which it was adhered.
Specification
Item | Value |
Name | 2 Inches X 30 Yards Waterproof No Residue Heavy Duty Gaff Tape For Stage Cables |
Model Number | HX-7125 |
Material | Matt cloth |
Adhesive Side | Single Sided |
Adhesive Type | Rubber |
Use | For Stage Cables |
Size | 2 Inches X 30 Yards |
Thickness | 0.25mm |
Color | Green/Red/Yellow/White/Black etc |
Tensile strength | 50(N/25mm) |
Elongation | 3(%) |
180° Peeling(N/25cm) | 13N/25cm |
Unwinding force | 2.2-3.2N/25cm |
Holding power | >26h |
Product Applications
A common application for gaffer tape is securing cables to a stage
floor, podium or other surface, either for safety or concealment.
It is also frequently used whenever a quick ad hoc fix is required,
from temporarily attaching fixtures or props, to salvaging a broken
piece of production equipment.
A narrow version of gaffer tape, called spike tape, is used in
theater productions for floor layout.
In the absence of console tape or artist tape, live sound engineers
or lighting board operators may use a strip of white gaffer tape
along the bottom of a mixing board, to label the channels or
submasters used for a particular show.
Used in the motion picture & television industries, and as a
book-binding tape