This application supports plastic foam laminates which can insulate architectural glass saving about 90-98% of the heat transfer. Of particular note is the specification of silicone based adhesives which provide the best moisture resistance. However, when a silicone adhesive is specified, the industry standard is to use a fluoro-silicone coated clear release plastic film. Unfortunately, such films have undesirable attributes. When applied to the adhesive surface of a plastic foam laminate, ripples and creases are are trapped under the cover. Also, when the cover film is trimmed without any overage, the installer must use a trial and error procedure making a tape tab to peel the cover film from the laminate body. The installer may also mistakenly start to peel an under layer of the laminate. Due to cost considerations, only one side or the cover film contains the fluoro-silicone release coating. A user requiring the removal during an off season storage will have to cover, mark or know the release side for proper storage. A mix up can ruin an entire lot of the plastic foam laminates. Since a fluoro-silicone plastic film is considered a specialty film, the supply chain is also problematic. However, the most undesirable attribute of the fluoro-silicone film is its cost. Today, the release film can cost about 40% of the entire plastic foam laminate's material cost. There is now a better cover film for the plastic foam laminates other than the standard fluoro-silicone film now costing about 2% of the entire laminate's material cost.
The new preferred cover film for the line of plastic foam laminates is a tulle, polyester/nylon, thin mesh film commonly used as a disposable veil material primarily used in weddings. This material is commercially available in most fabrics stores, even stocked in colors. The advantages are:
The new use of the thin mesh film is far superior than the standard fluoro-silicone cover film covering silicone adhesive surfaces such as the typical foam laminate surface. Visual appearance, shelf display, peel performance and cost reduction make the new use of the thin polyester/nylon mesh film a highly desirable substitute.