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Understanding Vinyl Performance
The wearlayer is critical to the performance of a vinyl floor. The
thickness of the wearlayer varies with each manufacturer's collection, or series
and is generally measured in mils. The thickness of a mil
is about the same as a page in your telephone book. So a 10 mil wearlayer would
be comparable in thickness to about 10 pages in your telephone book.
The more expensive vinyl floors generally will have a thicker wearlayer and
a much better finish. Your expectations for how long your vinyl floor will
look like new are usually based on the wearlayer's performance. To help you
understand wearlayer construction we need to define what the performance characteristics
are we are looking for in a vinyl floor. These performance characteristics
can be broken into several key areas:
- Easy to clean
- Stays looking like-new
- Resists staining from normal household products
- Doesn't show scratches easily
- Easy to cleanup spills
The easy to clean relates to how tough it is to remove soiling and other marks
from a floor's surface. When a floor begins to look old and drabby it is usually
caused by hundreds of fine hair-line scratches in the wearlayer. The fine scratches
come from dirt, girt, and sand laying on the wearlayer's surface. Another problem
low-end floors and older vinyl floors have is staining of the wearlayer, which
can happen from asphalt driveway sealers, Kool-Aid, plant food, marking pens,
etc...
The new, high-end vinyl floors have better technology to help resist showing
wear and staining far better than any of the middle to low-end vinyl floors
made today. The special urethane finishes used on today's residential, high-end
vinyl floors will give you a richer looking floor, better designs, better tear-resistance
and much better performance! |