|
HS Code |
332195 |
| Material | Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) |
| Mesh Type | Woven or knitted mesh/net |
| Color | Customizable, commonly white, black, or green |
| Thickness | Typically 0.5mm to 2.0mm |
| Mesh Size | Ranging from 0.5mm to 10mm aperture |
| Weight | Varies, usually 200g/m² to 800g/m² |
| Tensile Strength | High, generally 500-2000 N/5cm |
| Uv Resistance | Available, prevents degradation under sunlight |
| Flame Retardancy | Optional, conforms to various fire safety standards |
| Applications | Construction, agriculture, safety fencing, sports, transportation netting |
| Surface Finish | Smooth or textured |
| Waterproof | Yes, inherently resistant to water and moisture |
| Temperature Range | -20°C to 70°C (typical operational range) |
| Chemical Resistance | Good, resists acids, alkalis, and salts |
| Durability | Long lifespan, resists weathering and abrasion |
As an accredited PVC Mesh/Net Material Series factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.
| Packing | The PVC Mesh/Net Material Series is packaged in 50-meter rolls, securely wrapped with protective plastic film and reinforced cardboard for shipping. |
| Shipping | The PVC Mesh/Net Material Series is securely packaged in rolls or flat sheets, wrapped with protective materials to prevent damage. Each shipment includes clear labeling and documentation for easy identification. Shipping is arranged via reliable carriers, ensuring prompt and safe delivery to both domestic and international destinations according to client requirements. |
| Storage | PVC Mesh/Net Material Series should be stored in a clean, dry, and well-ventilated area away from direct sunlight, extreme temperatures, and sources of heat or ignition. Keep the material in its original packaging to prevent contamination and deformation. Avoid contact with sharp objects or chemicals that may cause damage. Ensure the storage area is free from moisture to maintain material integrity. |
Competitive PVC Mesh/Net Material Series prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.
For samples, pricing, or more information, please contact us at +8615365186327 or mail to sales3@ascent-chem.com.
We will respond to you as soon as possible.
Tel: +8615365186327
Email: sales3@ascent-chem.com
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Years of hands-on production experience have shown us you cannot treat all mesh or net products as equal. Plastics factories can easily shape, extrude, and coat, but the way raw PVC blends and the approach to knitting or weaving the filaments set each roll apart. Our team has spent many cycles perfecting how to transform flexible PVC into rugged, adaptable mesh and net materials. What matters isn’t just how clean the mesh looks on a sample stand – it’s about how the finished rolls perform in workday reality. That means standing up to sun, abrasion, constant flexing, stress, and shifting loads. An engineer can lay out a spec sheet, but it takes manufacturing muscle to back those numbers up with field results.
Out in the warehouse, a roll of mesh may look plain, but every yard that comes off our lines results from real-world testing and feedback: farmers catching drifting sand, builders needing debris control that doesn’t rip in the wind, gardeners keeping pests at bay, pool owners wanting something they can trust under wet feet summer after summer. Each industry applies mesh in its own way, so we do not take a copy-and-paste approach. Our PVC mesh and net products cover a wide span of strengths, thicknesses, opening sizes, and weave types because needs vary, and our job is to meet them with precision.
Not all PVC mesh comes from the same mold. Different tasks demand different levels of toughness and flexibility. Our most rugged series, for example, goes through a proprietary process where the PVC anchors itself right into the substrate filaments. This means less peeling or cracking under hard use. We have several models in our line-up: thick section meshes starting at 0.6mm up to 2.5mm, light nets for shade or small animal enclosures, heavy-duty debris mesh for traffic safety, and middleweight fabrics for fence windbreaks.
Every model stands up to specific tests in our own lab—UV exposure, tear strength, salt spray, repeated flex—and has to “earn its stripes” before it joins our catalog. Each roll comes off the line checked for consistent width and mesh size; we cut few corners because it costs less to get it right from the start. The mesh’s open area isn’t just a number on a spec sheet: it drives air flow, debris retention, and weight, all factors that matter to a real-world user.
Decades ago, manufacturers mostly offered plastic mesh and nets in polyethylene or polypropylene. PVC changed the equation. It brought better sunlight resistance, enhanced flexibility, and a toughness that stood up to stretching, folding, and strang winds. Over time, experience taught us which PVC formulations best resist yellowing in the sun, which additives avoid that sticky residue in heat, and which blends soften enough for shaping without sacrificing tear strength. Most importantly, our mesh can stand up to rough handling: installers throw it, workers drop tools, pallets get dragged.
Our factory’s direct involvement in PVC mesh gives us control over what goes into each batch. We weigh, blend, and extrude the base with care. The result is a smoother hand-feel that rolls out clean, with less friction and fewer snags, making installation and cutting easier for crews on the job site or around the garden. This practical advantage tends to disappear in generic mesh made with recycled or inconsistent raw materials, which short-change users with weak netting that splits or tears under holiday sun or a winter freeze.
We’ve wrestled with real problems: fencing must hold tight under wind load; sand screens cannot clog in the rain. Our thicker models—like the reinforced fence mesh—feature a dense core and can support climbing vines or resist strong animals, while lighter garden nets flex to cover berries and keep out birds. For years, construction crews have favored our high-visibility safety nets, available in bright colors, for quick roadside installation; they like that the PVC surface does not get chalky with exposure or stiff in cold weather.
Heavy-duty mesh models, built for debris control at worksites, feel firm in the hand and do not slacken with repeated use. Beach resorts and pool contractors lean toward our slip-resistant woven mesh, which combines soft tread with drainage openings—no puddling, no sudden tears, even with sandy bare feet and heavy traffic. Shading nets rely on a calculated open rate: too tight, and airflow drops; too loose, and sun protection fails. We do not guess at these numbers, but prove them on test installations before delivering bulk.
One of the earliest lessons in mesh production: field failures come from cheap shortcuts. We saw imported mesh break down after a season in high-altitude sun, or warp with monsoon rains, or fray from repeated fastening and cutting. Our PVC mesh, with its tailored flexibility and braid structure, holds shape even when abused. Cut edges show little fray; rolled and unrolled for installations, the material springs back instead of folding or bunching.
In agriculture, mesh must survive more than weather alone. Fertilizers spill, tractor wheels drag across, and wind stretches the fabric in fits and starts. Our UV-cured surface and stabilizer package fend off the usual suspects: checking, hardening, cracking, and color fading. Year after year, farmers and greenhouse operators return for replacements only as projects expand, not because the original mesh failed.
Water-based trades pose their own test. PVC mesh covers for pool drains, dock walkways, or aquaculture enclosures resist salt and mildew where cotton or poly fibers deteriorate. Using certified food-grade additives for our pond netting means safety for stock and water purity. Contractors appreciate that they can pressure-wash road mesh after muddy rains without the netting unraveling.
We’ve heard all the requests—special widths for tunnel houses, colored stripes for property lines, extra-rigid models for flat screens, logos and custom colors. Our long production runs give us flexibility. Rather than slicing pre-made fabric, we weave or extrude the mesh at the width required, keeping edge strength consistent. We deliver color matching that lasts: pigment runs through the entire PVC mass, meaning that scrapes or cuts don’t reveal unsightly white cores.
Our QA teams do not stop at random rolls pulled for tests. Every shift, each operator checks for blocked or misshapen cells, foreign particles, and tension issues. One strand out of place can ruin the integrity of a net fence or leave a weak spot in a windscreen. By running production in-house, we adjust on the fly—see a drop in tensile strength in one batch, and the formulation gets tweaked before the next batch leaves. No outside trader or agent holds that kind of oversight.
Customers often ask where PVC mesh outperforms other plastic mesh types. The answer usually starts with conditions: in a greenhouse frame, a windy balcony, a flood-prone fence, or a truck bed liner, PVC’s blend of toughness, pliancy, and grip sets it apart. Polypropylene can feel hard and break under repeated folding, while polyethylene stretches but sun becomes its enemy. PVC’s balance—especially with the modifiers we use—means our net fabrics recover their shape after loading, tolerate sharp bends in shipping, and keep working in years two and three, where low-budget mesh usually fails.
Some applications benefit from mesh with a looser weave, while netting for heavy catch or debris needs tighter control. Our series covers both scenarios. Anti-climb security net products use thick filaments and small mesh size to stymie cutting. By contrast, grape farmers want big cell mesh that deters birds without choking the vines. Most rivals offer stock mesh widths—rolls in set lengths and “one-size-fits-all” apertures—not always good enough for specialized demands. Our machines run both broad and narrow mesh without high minimum orders, ensuring customers buy what they need, not what’s left on a shelf.
A city baseball field wants fencing that lets wind pass but doesn’t unravel after a season in the sun. Contractors working traffic jobs want orange mesh that shows up on rainy mornings, stays flexible, and doesn’t splinter when cut. Gardeners search for netting gentle on new shoots, but rugged enough to keep rabbits out or support vertical peas. These aren’t abstract requirements cooked up in a marketing office. They all end up on our factory floor: we cut, sew, patch, and test until the result measures up.
During hurricane recovery, windbreak mesh and debris nets see their toughest test. Trees down, debris flying, fencing torn: we design heavy mesh to knot at key intervals, not just at the selvage, giving extra toughness at stress points. City projects look for flame-retardant netting or mesh that resists chemical run-off; we blend in self-extinguishing additives and stabilizers for those jobs. Every new challenge—snow load, vertical gardening, temporary livestock pens—teaches us to adapt our weaving, curing, or edge-finishing process.
Factories rarely succeed by copying. Field failures land back in our inboxes, so we use every setback to tune our process. Over the years, we’ve changed pressure/temperature profiles, swapped curing ovens, traded out pigment suppliers, and run thousands of meters of failed mesh before landing on the formula that balances softness and strength. We keep close contact with end-users—farmers, contractors, maintenance crews—picking up samples from worksites to see how material fares after storms, heat waves, or a year of freeze/thaw.
We also put a premium on worker skill. The finishers and QC teams who run our mesh lines understand what “good” feels and looks like. They’re trained to flag weak welds, surface roughness, uneven thread, or color shift. This experience allows us to keep a low rejection rate and high batch-to-batch consistency. We keep data logs on every run, tracking tweaks or substitutions in each batch, so we can follow a problem back to a specific shift or ingredient.
We manufacture our PVC mesh to meet both domestic and international safety and environmental requirements. Many customers need confirmation that netting touching food or livestock does not leach harmful substances. We work only with raw materials that have traceable purchase records and confirm compliance through accredited third-party labs. For flame-retardant or anti-static mesh, industries such as public transit or offshore construction rely on our documented formulation adjustments to meet their auditing standards. Every project benefits from traceable production; no batch leaves without a tracking code.
Pressure from clients and regulators points toward greener mesh and net products. We’ve experimented with recycled content, lead-free stabilizers, and better pigment systems. While some recycled PVC adds softness but lowers sun resistance, we balance recycled and virgin compounds to deliver a stable, responsible mesh that keeps up with changing regulations. After-use recycling remains a hurdle across the industry, but we design netting with minimal finishing aids and easy separation of colors to help future processors. This is not lip service but a step-by-step process—each change comes from pilot lines inside our own walls, not borrowed from a textbook.
Customers gain when they work directly with a producer. We stand by the mesh that ships, honor batch codes for critical projects, and adjust formula or weave tech as soon as a pattern emerges in field complaints. Communication lines run from factory floor to client—no long relay through middlemen or distant distributors. We track every roll from extrusion, knitting, curing, packaging, and delivery, giving us the depth to support after-sales complaints or special requests with full traceability.
Our R&D and engineering teams open up trial lines for big-volume clients. Need altered mesh density? Color match for a local code? Fine-tuned softness for a packaging application? Instead of asking “if it’s possible,” we try it at small scale before rolling out mass production. This level of partnership grew over years: not all requests lead to a new product, but every one brings us closer to what real users need.
Every roll of PVC mesh leaving our warehouse holds a direct link to the tests, tweaks, and continuous improvement happening inside our factory. From basic garden jobs to the toughest debris containment, our mesh/net series stands for performance you can measure—not just on a chart, but on the ground, in hands-on conditions. By running our own lines and learning from every project, we push the material further, adapting to new customer requests and field conditions. Mesh is simple in appearance but complex in requirements; direct manufacture lets us control what matters: quality, consistency, and a practical fit for each unique application.