Glossary Hub

Web Tension

Definition

The controlled force applied to a moving web; critical for registration, wrinkle control, and winding quality.

Applications

  • Printing presses
  • Laminators
  • Slitters
  • Inspection rewinders

Benefits

  • Improves registration
  • Reduces wrinkles and breaks
  • Stabilizes roll build quality

Industry Examples

  • Medical: stable tension to avoid dimensional distortion in pouch-making webs.
  • Industrial: controlled tension to prevent telescoping on heavy-gauge laminates.
  • Electronics: maintains registration accuracy when printing compliance information on shielding films.

FAQ

Q: What happens if tension is too high?

A: Stretching, neck-in, and registration drift; potential web breaks.

Q: What happens if tension is too low?

A: Wrinkles, wandering web, and poor winding hardness.

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