Laminates are layers of material built up and bonded together to increase thickness or combine desirable properties, as in braid, varnished cambric, and tape constructions.
A laminate is created by stacking and bonding multiple layers so the finished material has greater thickness, strength, or insulating capability than any single layer alone. In wire and cable, laminated constructions such as varnished cambric combine fabric and insulating compounds to deliver dependable dielectric performance along with mechanical durability. Layering allows manufacturers to pair materials whose individual strengths complement one another.
In commercial and industrial applications, laminated tapes and films are also used as shields, moisture barriers, and insulation within cable cores. By selecting layers with specific electrical, thermal, and mechanical characteristics, a manufacturer can tune a cable for the stresses of its intended environment. A laminated shield, for example, can combine a metallic foil with a polymer carrier to provide both conductivity for interference rejection and strength for handling.
Because the layers in a laminate can be selected independently, designers gain fine control over the finished material, pairing a strong carrier with a high-performance dielectric or a conductive layer with an insulating one to meet a precise set of requirements.
At Windy City Wire, an understanding of laminated constructions supports the selection of low-voltage cable engineered for consistent performance in commercial AV, networking, and control systems. Knowing how layered materials contribute to shielding and insulation helps customers match cable to the electrical and physical demands of their applications. Because layered shields and barriers play a direct role in rejecting interference and blocking moisture, they are an important factor in how dependably a cable performs in a busy electrical environment over the long term.