This machine tutorial explains how to operate and troubleshoot keeping solventless coat weight consistent across width on laminating machines—solventless, extrusion, thermal, and water-based. It is written for shift supervisors, maintenance technicians, and application engineers who need repeatable procedures—not theory alone.
Machine scope and operating context
Yaoshg field teams use this discipline on presses and converting lines built in Wenzhou—from early stack flexo units through CI, gravure, laminating, slitting, bag making, and paper container equipment. The steps below assume normal safety lockout rules, OEM manual limits, and documented substrate specifications for each job.
Coat weight variation is usually a combined effect of roller condition, nip geometry, and web behavior. Operators often chase one variable while the real issue is interaction between three.
Begin with roller profile measurement and confirm no crown or wear step beyond tolerance. Even a small diameter loss can alter local transfer and produce repeating bond weakness bands.
Step-by-step machine procedure
Nip pressure should be checked with pressure-sensitive film at multiple positions across width. Equal cylinder pressure does not always mean equal linear load if mounting or bearing condition differs.
Laminating bonds two or more webs with adhesive, melt, or thermal activation. Solventless two-part adhesives need meter-mix accuracy and pot-life discipline. Extrusion lamination adds melt curtain stability and chill-roll control.
Nip pressure and temperature define bond—not adhesive choice alone. First-meter peel tests and cure checks gate order release.
Operator shift checklist
- Confirm adhesive mix ratio, pot life clock, and coat weight target.
- Set nip pressure and temperature to supplier window for structure.
- Check web alignment and anti-wrinkle rollers before full speed.
- Peel-test and cure check first meter before order release.
Common defects and corrective adjustments
Web tension must be steady entering and leaving the adhesive transfer zone. Tension ripple changes contact mechanics and can shift coat weight even when mechanical settings are unchanged.
Use cross-web sampling at fixed intervals, then map values to machine-side positions. This turns quality data into a mechanical action list instead of generic reject notes.
Foam in water-based lamination often traces to pH drift, contaminated mix heads, or entrained air after pump cavitation. Solventless gel spots frequently mean mix ratio deviation or expired adhesive lot.
Neck-in on extrusion lamination changes width at chill roll—compensate with edge guides and document line speed versus neck-in percent.
Maintenance records and when to call service
Adhesive mixing hygiene prevents gel and blocked applicator rolls. Log mix ratio alarms, chill-roll temperature, and nip pressure trends weekly on production structures.
If mechanical adjustment, drive parameter changes, or repeated defects exceed on-site scope, log serial number, job recipe, and photos before contacting Yaoshg service. Commissioning engineers can remote-review HMI trends when VPN or data export is available—faster resolution when shift records are complete.