|
HS Code |
882636 |
| Material Type | Nylon |
| Color | Coloured |
| Fiber Diameter | Varies (typically 10-100 microns) |
| Length | Customizable |
| Tenacity | High |
| Moisture Absorption | Low |
| Melting Point | 215-260°C |
| Lightfastness | Good |
| Abrasion Resistance | Excellent |
| Chemical Resistance | Good against alkalis and some acids |
| Elasticity | High |
| Density | 1.14 g/cm³ |
| Electrical Conductivity | Low |
| Thermal Stability | Moderate |
| Applications | Textiles, carpets, industrial use |
As an accredited Nylon Coloured Fibre factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.
| Packing | The packaging for Nylon Coloured Fibre contains 25 kg, packed in moisture-proof, durable polyethylene bags with proper labelling and sealing. |
| Shipping | Nylon Coloured Fibre should be shipped in tightly sealed, moisture-resistant packaging to prevent contamination and damage. Transport in clean, dry containers, away from direct sunlight and sources of heat. Ensure proper labeling for material identification and safety. Handle with care to avoid crushing or deformation during transit. No hazardous classification typically required. |
| Storage | Nylon coloured fibre should be stored in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated area, away from direct sunlight, heat sources, and incompatible materials such as strong acids or oxidising agents. Keep the fibre in sealed, labelled containers to prevent contamination or moisture absorption. Ensure the storage area is free from ignition sources and equipped with appropriate fire safety measures. |
Competitive Nylon Coloured Fibre 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
Flexible payment, competitive price, premium service - Inquire now!
Every batch of Nylon Coloured Fibre leaving our facility has its roots in practical demands from manufacturers and their technical teams. After years of producing both standard and custom-engineered fibres, we know a dyed filament isn’t just about adding color to polymer. Colour gets judged not just by hue but by how it changes the feel and function of the final product. Our engineers measure quality by melt flow, tensile strength, molecular weight, dye fastness, and by how the fibre performs in downstream use—not just by standard charts, but through hands-on use in real equipment.
Our model range covers a spectrum of deniers, with options that suit everything from filtration media to automotive carpets. You need a fibre that runs consistently on your spinning line without blocking filters or causing static build-up. We don’t send anything out until it has survived both accelerated weathering tests and real-time wet scrubbing. Our pigment masterbatches lock in colour at the pellet stage, giving the fibre a core-dyed structure instead of surface-applied dye. That means fading or color rubbing isn’t a worry, even under decades of sun or repeated industrial washing.
Coloured nylon fibre isn’t new—plenty of mills worldwide have tried adding pigment after polymerization, or splicing color with surface dyes. Results can look similar if you compare press photos. On the floor, though, clients run into sheds, yellowing, chalking, or even mechanical weakness after cycles of heat and pressure. For a carpet line, that means customer complaints or warranty headaches; for an air filter application, it means plugs and safety concerns.
Our production lines combine continuous polymerization controls with in-line color dosing, not batch-mixing. Every extrusion head uses a gravimetric feeder, and each pigment source goes through pre-qualification for light and chemical stability. Once a roll comes off, samples get cut, weighed, and tested for elongation, shrinkage, crimp, and dispersal pattern. Records for each lot stay archived for five years. Experience tells us the industry remembers failures far longer than they celebrate looks. For clients, stable color and consistent physical properties rank higher than any marketing claim on paper.
Across a full range of 1.7 to 22 denier, our fibres can be cut to precision staple lengths between 32mm and 130mm, depending on what your machines accept. Coloured options include black, blue, green, red, yellow, and custom pantones, using pigment grades with high C.I. numbers for resistance. Our melting point stays around 255°C, with a breaking tenacity of 6.2 grams per denier in standard settings. Moisture regain holds near 4.2% at nominal humidity, controlling static during processing.
We listen most closely to our customers in automotive, filtration, home furnishing, apparel, and geotextiles. Each field brings different stressors—heat setting in spunbond lines, softening in carpet baths, needle-punching in filtration, or stretch and comfort in clothing. If a product falls short, the result isn’t just a defect ticket; whole panels or batches might need to be pulled. That’s why we test not just the fibre, but how it interacts with latex backings, linings, yarns, and adhesives. Color matching gets confirmed under both D65 daylight and TL84 store lighting, not just one ideal setup.
Every roll and bag carries a trackable barcode, not for compliance but so line supervisors know exactly which lot their machines are running. We always keep enough control material from every major shipment for side-by-side analysis if a problem ever does crop up.
Many manufacturers choose polypropylene, polyester, or acrylic fibre for technical reasons—cost, chemical resistance, hydrophobic or hydrophilic profile, or available colors. Our team keeps learning how these choices play out in end products. Polypropylene resists acids and floats well, but won’t hold most dye types except special classes, and can become brittle under UV. Polyester takes disperse dyes and handles heat better, yet has a less pleasant handfeel in consumer textiles and can attract oil-based stains. Acrylic gives good warmth, yet pills often and doesn’t match the abrasion strength of nylon.
Nylon beats other synthetics in toughness, resilience, and dye affinity. For applications needing deep color, high wear, and repeated exposure to sun or solvents, our coloured nylon fibre delivers true through-dyed structure, not just a pigmented surface. Comparing rub tests, nylon maintains color integrity through 25,000 Martindale cycles, outlasting polyesters and polypropylene options that chalk after as few as 7,000 cycles in the same test. For fire resistance, our polyamide backbone meets automotive and building codes in multiple countries, especially where halogen content is restricted.
Stock colours come from organic and inorganic pigment bases. For environments set to face chemical bleaching or heavy metals, we choose only pigments certified for their end-use exposure and spectral stability. That way, chemical plants, or public transport textiles, don’t face surprise fading after months of use. Clients ask how our colour holds up after antibacterial, antifungal, or flame-retardant finishes. Our real-world results prove colour lock stays strong even through repeated calendering and heat setting.
In our years on the production floor, we’ve handled feedback from clients with backgrounds ranging from multinational carpet makers to small local filter producers. Some tried using low-priced, imported pigment without considering migration or exposure, which led to failures during QUV (accelerated weathering) tests. Colour bled away after just a few months, forcing costly replacements. By using in-house compounding and full-spectrum pigment analysis, we avoid those pitfalls. All production batches for high-UV and outdoor use run extended lightfastness tests before leaving our plant—no exceptions.
For flame-retardant applications, we modify polymer chains and select pigments that don’t interact with phosphorus or antimony, ensuring no visible color shift or unexpected smoke during combustion. Our experience in this field led us to invest in both third-party and factory fire tunnels—fewer surprises for customers, and full traceability on every shipment. Where smaller producers rely on external testing, our on-site laboratory tests every lot, not just random samples.
Experiments with different cross-sectional shapes also started with demands from clients looking for better fibre-matrix adhesion or visual effects in high-end furnishings. Our triangular, trilobal, and hollow filament lines meet requests for added sheen, improved elastic recovery, or lighter weight. These geometries help in fields like automotive interiors or apparel linings, where a balance of bulk and softness wins out against standard round fibres.
Most problems onsite come down to compatibility and process stability. Troubleshooting often starts with colour acceptance—does the batch run clean on existing lines, or does it shed pigment dust? We stress-pilot batches on multiple line speeds, lengths, and temperatures, watching not just for viscosity changes but also filament tension and drawing response. Process engineers in spinning or twisting houses often highlight static issues, surface roughness, or mixed lot shade variation as primary headaches. Because we handle full synthesis, we control molecular weight, crystalline alignment, and additive impact long before drawing or crimping. Each parameter gets tuned with client feedback.
Ask any plant manager about downtime. Too many breaks or blockages, and the real cost of switching suppliers shows up. Clients regularly ask for color stability with zero batch-to-batch surprise, as their lines cannot adjust settings for every new lot. Our fiber's consistency isn’t by chance; we’ve spent years iterating on raw resin quality, filtration mesh, and pigment masterbatching. We track root causes for any complaints in color drift, tensile drop, or fiber flexibility. That learning cycle drives our own recipe modifications, long after other suppliers move on to new orders.
For recycled-content fibre lines, which many clients now request for environmental regulations, we pre-wash and de-metal all incoming flakes. Each colored pellet undergoes laser sorting to weed out off-shades before it ever touches the extruder. We blend color concentrates using ratios proven not to compromise final mechanical or optical properties. No batch moves forward without passing melt filtration and filter pressure analysis.
Some of our first major contracts came from carpet tile manufacturers, who needed blues, greys, and blacks that could withstand repeated foot traffic and sunlight streaming through office windows. We learned quickly that pigments look remarkably different after calendering or latex application than in raw form. Each time a customer found patchiness or inconsistent gloss, we invited their team to our plant floor, solving issues side by side with production staff. Direct oversight cut troubleshooting time from weeks to hours—no more back-and-forth email cycles.
Filtration clients bring another set of demands: no fiber shedding, zero static cling, and no color washout under acidic or basic process streams. We run every lot through simulated filtration tests using actual process fluids, not just water, to replicate customer conditions. Because our lines operate 24/7, we keep full documentation of every hour’s output, cross-referenced to batch and raw material.
Upholstery and apparel buyers often push for an ultra-soft hand with maximum color pop. Achieving both means adjusting polymer moisture profile, additives, and stretching technique. Some of our best improvements in fiber luster and hand came from direct partnership with weaving and knitting mills willing to test and give honest feedback. Their operators told us exactly where other suppliers’ fiber would clump, stick, or lose color in the finishing process.
Outdoor and sport textile clients face tireless UV exposure and physical abrasion. We partnered with pigment chemists to build masterbatches around only those pigments holding a Blue Wool scale rating of 7-8. After multiple years of direct in-field testing—awnings, tents, hiking apparel—clients realized that replacing colorants with lesser grades cut initial cost, but doubled warranty returns. We stand by our choice to use only long-life pigments, even if it means more expensive sourcing.
Workwear or uniform makers demand fabrics that stand up to repeated washing and chemical disinfection. Typical surface-dyed fibres fail quick wash testing. Our through-dyed nylon fibre keeps color saturation and strength, even after more than 100 industrial wash cycles. Customers see fewer replacements and complaints. Over time, this dependability builds trust and keeps relationships strong.
Any manufacturer faces unexpected hurdles—raw material shortages, pigment supply chain hiccups, or equipment downtime. We learned to maintain critical stockpiles of key resins and colour concentrates. By investing in redundancy across extrusion heads and pigment stations, both maintenance windows and emergency surges run smooth. Our team rotates staff through overlapping shifts, so no single skill set is left unmanned. In bind, experience with in-house repairs beats long delays for outside help.
Clients get real-time status on their orders, not marketing-select snapshots. Our lot histories stretch back long enough to solve any post-delivery complaint with clear data. Where clients need scheduled delivery for Just-In-Time manufacturing, we coordinate shipments using rail, truck, or container, keeping customers updated at each milestone. During transport shutdowns and port delays, keeping clear lines open lets us hold deliveries until clients have room—minimizing storage costs and risk.
Every colored fibre is batch-certified, not just based on internal testing but with access granted for customer-side audits on demand. Customized requests, whether for shade, cut, or additive, can be matched in smaller test runs before full-scale production. No speculative runs; only batches that have cleared pre-production trials.
Buyers searching for reliability sometimes end up cycling through multiple distributors, not always sure where products originate. Working with us means dealing with the actual creators—technicians, colorists, machine operators—handling every process from resin to winding to shipment. Fewer unknowns lead to faster issue resolution. Our doors stay open for plant visits, cross-lab analysis, or even extended trials on customer lines. This transparency helps set proper expectations around both timelines and technical limitations.
Everyone in manufacturing faces market pressure to lower cost, boost speed, and cut downtime. Staying honest about material realities has protected both customers and ourselves from chasing trends with hidden drawbacks. If fibre requires higher upfront pigment cost to deliver years of fade resistance, or the production line needs a new screen size for best results, these choices become part of the conversation early.
Entire market segments now chase sustainability; recycled nylon and closed-loop dye cycles become the new norm. We share technical data and process learnings openly, so customers know where performance differences arise between virgin and recycled inputs. Commitment to both quality and environmental standards gives us the flexibility to meet tomorrow’s regulations and end-user demands.
Ultimately, building nylon coloured fibre isn’t just about matching a color card. It’s about creating practical, durable material, supported by firsthand expertise and leadership willing to learn from every customer’s unique situation. Those lessons—the unfiltered, real-world feedback—drive our production and continuous improvement every day.