When you import fiberglass mesh from a manufacturer, you are not just buying a product — you are betting on consistency. A single batch that fails on-site can damage your reputation, delay your project timeline, and cost you far more than the invoice value of the mesh itself.
This is why quality control (QC) is not a department at CredenTex. It is a system that runs through every stage of production — from raw yarn inspection to final roll packaging.
In this article, we open the door to our QC process so you know exactly what happens before a roll of CredenTex mesh reaches your warehouse.
1. Why Quality Control Matters for Fiberglass Mesh
Fiberglass mesh is a deceptively simple product. At a glance, all mesh looks similar — a grid of fibers with a coating. But hidden differences in yarn quality, coating formulation, curing temperature, and weave consistency can make the difference between a mesh that lasts 10 years and one that fails in 10 months.
For B2B buyers, the consequences of poor quality include:
- Installation failures: Mesh that tears during handling or delaminates after plastering
- Alkali degradation: Uncoated or poorly coated glass fibers attacked by cement alkalinity
- UV breakdown: Insect screen coating that cracks and peels after one summer
- Inconsistent dimensions: Rolls that are shorter, narrower, or heavier than ordered, throwing off your inventory and pricing
- Customer returns: Your buyers blame you — and you risk losing long-term contracts
A robust QC system is your insurance policy. And it should start at the factory, not at the port of arrival.
2. CredenTex QC System: Four-Stage Framework
Our quality control follows a four-stage framework that covers the entire production lifecycle:
| Stage | When | What We Check | Action If Failed |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Incoming Inspection (IQC) | Before production begins | Raw fiberglass yarn, PVC resin, coating chemicals, packaging materials | Reject batch, return to supplier |
| 2. In-Process Control (IPQC) | During weaving, coating, curing | Mesh density, yarn tension, coating thickness, oven temperature, line speed | Stop line, adjust, re-inspect |
| 3. Final Inspection (FQC) | After production, before packaging | Roll weight, width, length, visual defects, coating uniformity, mesh count | Grade as B/C stock or scrap |
| 4. Pre-Shipment Inspection (PSI) | Before container loading | Random sampling per AQL standard, packaging integrity, labeling accuracy, moisture protection | Hold shipment, rework or replace |
Each stage has documented inspection criteria, sampling plans, and pass/fail thresholds. Nothing leaves the factory without passing all four checkpoints.
3. Incoming Raw Material Inspection (IQC)
Quality begins at the raw material level. Poor yarn produces poor mesh — no amount of process control downstream can fix it.
What we test on incoming fiberglass yarn:
- Linear density (Tex): Measured with a digital yarn evenness tester. Variation beyond ±3% triggers rejection.
- Tensile strength: Single-yarn tensile test per ISO 3341. Minimum breaking force must meet our specification for each yarn grade.
- Sizing agent compatibility: The sizing on the glass filaments must be compatible with our PVC and acrylic coating formulations. Incompatible sizing = poor coating adhesion = early delamination.
- Moisture content: Measured by Karl Fischer titration. Excess moisture causes weaving defects and coating bubbles.
- Visual inspection: No broken filaments, fluff, contamination, or color inconsistency.
What we test on incoming PVC resin and coating compounds:
- K-value (polymerization degree): Determines coating flexibility and mechanical properties
- Plasticizer type and content: Affects low-temperature flexibility and UV resistance
- Thermal stability: Congo red test to ensure the compound can survive curing oven temperatures without degrading
- Color batch consistency: Spectrophotometer measurement against reference standard
4. In-Process Quality Control (IPQC)
Our production lines are monitored continuously. Operators perform checks at fixed intervals, and supervisors conduct random audits throughout each shift.
| Process Step | Control Parameter | Check Frequency | Target / Tolerance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Warping (Beaming) | Yarn tension (cN/tex) | Every beam change | ±5% across all ends |
| Weaving | Mesh count (ends × picks per inch) | Every 30 minutes | ±1 count from spec |
| Weaving | Selvage quality | Continuous visual | No loose ends, even tension |
| Coating | Dip tank viscosity | Every 2 hours | Per formulation spec (±5%) |
| Coating | Coating pick-up (wet weight) | Every roll | Per product grade |
| Curing Oven | Zone temperatures (3 zones) | Continuous (PLC monitored) | ±3°C from setpoint |
| Curing Oven | Residence time (line speed) | Continuous | ±5% from target |
| Slitting | Width tolerance | Every slit roll | ±3 mm |
Why coating control matters most: The coating step is where many manufacturers cut corners. Insufficient coating = poor alkali resistance (for wall mesh) and poor UV resistance (for insect screen). Excessive coating = stiff mesh that is hard to handle and wastes material cost.
Our coating lines use automated viscosity control and precision metering rollers to maintain consistency batch after batch. This is one of the areas where experience and equipment investment separate professional manufacturers from low-cost workshops.
5. Finished Product Testing (FQC)
Every production batch undergoes a standardized suite of lab tests before it is cleared for packaging. These tests are destructive — we cut samples from actual production rolls — because inspecting the surface is not enough.
| Test | Standard Reference | What It Measures | Typical Pass Criteria |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mesh Count | ASTM D3775 / ISO 7211-2 | Ends × picks per 25 mm or per inch | ±1 from specification |
| Grammage (Weight) | ISO 3374 | Grams per square meter (g/m²) | ±5% from nominal |
| Tensile Strength | ISO 13934-1 (strip method) | Breaking force in N/5 cm (warp & weft) | ≥ product minimum |
| Alkali Resistance | ETAG 004 / ISO 10406-1 | Residual tensile strength after 28-day NaOH immersion | ≥ 50% retention |
| Coating Content | Internal method (loss on ignition) | Percentage of coating by weight | Per product grade (typically 12–22%) |
| Width & Length | — | Roll dimensions as labeled | Width: ±5 mm; Length: 0 / +2% |
| UV Aging (Insect Screen) | ISO 4892-2 (Xenon arc) | Color change and strength retention after accelerated weathering | ΔE ≤ 4; strength retention ≥ 70% |
A note on alkali resistance testing: For fiberglass mesh used in EIFS (Exterior Insulation and Finish Systems) and plaster reinforcement, alkali resistance is the single most critical performance parameter. Portland cement has a pH of 12–13, which is highly alkaline. Glass fibers without adequate protective coating will be chemically attacked and lose strength rapidly.
We conduct alkali resistance testing per ETAG 004 methodology: mesh samples are immersed in 5% NaOH solution at 23°C for 28 days, then tensile tested. The residual strength must be at least 50% of the original value for the mesh to be considered alkali-resistant.
6. Pre-Shipment Inspection (PSI)
Before any container is sealed, our QC team performs a final sampling inspection based on the Acceptable Quality Limit (AQL) system — the same statistical sampling standard used by third-party inspectors like SGS, Bureau Veritas, and Intertek.
Our standard PSI protocol:
- Sampling plan: ISO 2859-1, Level II, AQL 2.5 (major defects) / AQL 4.0 (minor defects)
- Sample size: Determined by lot size; typically 5–20 rolls per container
- Checks performed: Roll weight, width, length, visual appearance, mesh count verification, packaging integrity, label accuracy, moisture protection
- Documentation: Inspection report with photos, signed by QC inspector and production supervisor
Buyers can also arrange third-party inspection. We welcome SGS, Bureau Veritas, Intertek, or your own appointed inspector to visit our factory and conduct PSI to your specifications. Just let us know in advance during order confirmation.
7. Certifications and Compliance
CredenTex maintains the following quality management certifications and product compliance credentials:
- ISO 9001:2015 — Quality Management System certified by an accredited body, covering design, production, and inspection of fiberglass mesh products
- CE Marking — For construction mesh products exported to the European Economic Area, tested to harmonized standards under the Construction Products Regulation (CPR)
- REACH Compliance — Our coating formulations and fiberglass products comply with EU REACH regulation on chemical substances
- RoHS Compliance — Products tested for restricted hazardous substances
Copies of all certifications are available on request. We encourage buyers to verify credentials before placing orders — transparency is part of our QC philosophy.
8. What B2B Buyers Should Ask Any Mesh Supplier
Whether you buy from CredenTex or another manufacturer, here are the QC-related questions you should always ask:
- “Can you show me your incoming raw material inspection records?” — If they cannot, they are not controlling what goes into their product.
- “What is your sampling plan for final inspection?” — “We check every roll” is not a statistically valid answer. AQL-based sampling is the industry standard.
- “Do you have in-house alkali resistance testing capability?” — If they outsource all testing, turnaround is slow and traceability is weak.
- “Can I see a blank copy of your batch inspection report?” — The format tells you what they actually measure vs. what they claim to measure.
- “How do you handle a batch that fails FQC?” — The answer reveals whether QC is a real system or window dressing.
- “Do you retain retention samples from each production batch?” — Retention samples allow you to compare future shipments against the original approved sample.
A professional manufacturer will answer all of these without hesitation. If you receive vague responses or excuses, consider it a red flag.
Key Takeaway
Quality control is not about catching defects at the end of the line. It is about building consistency into every step — from the yarn that enters the factory to the roll that leaves it.
At CredenTex, our four-stage QC system (IQC → IPQC → FQC → PSI) is backed by documented procedures, calibrated equipment, and a team that understands that every batch shipped carries our name — and yours.
Consistency is not an accident. It is a system.
Want to see our QC documentation or get samples for your own testing? Contact us and we will provide everything you need to make an informed sourcing decision.
