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Guanma cable label engineering aid
Cable Jacket Fit Matrix
This matrix helps purchasing and engineering teams compare cable surface conditions before selecting cable labels, wire labels, or wire marking labels. Use it to avoid vague sample requests and to define validation work before converter trials.
| Condition | Facestock Direction | Adhesive Direction | Coating / Print Focus | Validation Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smooth PVC jacket | PET adhesive film or BOPP adhesive film | Acrylic adhesive or water-based adhesive | Thermal transfer printing or flexographic printing | Initial tack and edge lift after wrap |
| Small diameter cable | Flexible BOPP or thin PET | Conformable permanent adhesive | Coating that keeps barcode clarity | Wrap memory after bending |
| Handled or oily cable | PET or synthetic paper | Oil resistance adhesive direction | Protective coating or self-laminating labels | Finger oil, machine oil, and rub testing |
| Outdoor cable route | Weatherable PET adhesive film | Outdoor weatherability adhesive direction | UV-stable coating and ink match | Humidity, UV exposure, and edge lift |
| Hot equipment zone | PET adhesive film | High temperature resistance direction | Thermal transfer ribbon compatibility | Heat aging and adhesive flow |
| Control cabinet wiring | Synthetic paper or PET | Acrylic adhesive | Printable cable labels with clear ID text | Handling, abrasion, and serial readability |
| Industrial power cable | PET or durable synthetic stock | Aggressive permanent adhesive | Overlamination if print exposure is high | Temperature cycling and outdoor aging |
| Data cable bundle | BOPP or thin PET | Permanent or removable direction by service plan | Flag or wrap-around labels | Readability on bundle radius |
| Machinery wire assembly area | PET adhesive film | Oil-resistant and heat-reviewed adhesive | Coating matched to UV printing or thermal transfer | Oil wipe, rub, and heat exposure sequence |
How to use the matrix
Pick the row closest to your cable jacket, then send Guanma the cable material, diameter, print method, exposure condition, and roll requirement. The matrix does not replace testing on the actual cable surface.
Review sequence
- Start with surface energy instead of asking for a stronger glue.
- Then confirm whether the cable will bend after the label is applied.
- Small diameters usually need more attention to facestock memory.
- Oily work areas require a wipe test before barcode approval.
- Weather exposure should be tested with humidity and UV steps.
- Heat aging can change adhesive flow and print readability.
- Self-laminating labels add print cover, but they still need jacket fit.
- Wrap-around labels should be judged after the cable is flexed.
- Procurement teams can compare rows before requesting samples.
- Engineering teams should approve the validation focus before scale-up.
- Converters should confirm liner release before die-cutting trial rolls.
- Factories can keep failed samples for the next adhesive review.



