Installation Options

How heat-shrink roll covers
get onto your roller.

Fluoron offers three install paths for heat-shrink fluoropolymer roll covers: ship the roll to Fluoron, schedule an onsite Fluoron install, or train your maintenance team. Every path starts the same way: send the roll details so engineering can spec the sleeve first.

Spec it first.

Roll OD, face length, temperature, and what’s failing on the line. That is what engineering needs before any install method is scheduled.

Send the roll details
Overview

Installation for heat-shrink fluoropolymer roll covers

A Fluoron heat-shrink roll cover: FEP, PFA, PTFE, or conductive PTFE under the Fluoro-Clear, Fluoro-Flex, Fluoro-Wear, and Fluoro-Stat families: arrives sized larger than the roll body and recovers to a tight mechanical fit under controlled heat. Whether the install happens at Fluoron, at your plant, or by your trained team, the underlying process is the same. What changes is logistics: roll size, outage window, distance, and how often you re-sleeve.

Watch · 2 minutes

Fluoro-Clear 60 (FEP) sleeve install: how a heat-shrink roll cover seats on the roller

A compact walkthrough of the heat-shrink install: prep the roll surface, slide the oversized FEP sleeve into position over the roll body, position to the face length, then apply controlled heat so the sleeve recovers down to the roll diameter for a tight mechanical fit. Adhesive bonding is added separately when service conditions require it: see the etched vs unetched section below for when bonding is specified.

02:00 · No audio · Silent walkthrough Fluoro-Clear 60 (FEP) heat-shrink sleeve install on a roll cover
Setup & prep

Roll surface is cleaned and the cover position is marked to face length. The sleeve is built oversized to the roll OD so it slides on without forcing.

Sleeve pull-on

FEP sleeve is drawn over the roll body and positioned axially so the cover lands inside the marked face length with the correct overhang on each end.

Heat shrink & recover

Controlled heat is applied as the roll rotates so the sleeve recovers evenly down to the roll diameter for a tight mechanical fit; bonding is added only when the service spec calls for it.

A / Three install paths

Ship the roll, onsite Fluoron install, or customer install training

All three use the same heat-shrink process; the right one depends on roll size, schedule, and shipping logistics.

01: Ship to Fluoron We install at our facility Heat-shrink install · QA verified

Ship the roll to Fluoron. Engineering specs the sleeve, installs it on our line using the heat-shrink process, and verifies concentricity and runout before returning the roll ready to run. Often the cleanest path when the roll can leave the line during a planned outage and shipping is practical.

Best forFirst-time customers, premium release positions
Spec stepAlways first: before the roll ships
QAConcentricity & runout verified before return
Lead timeSleeve build 2–4 weeks; install scheduled to arrival
Send the roll details →
02: Onsite Fluoron install Our technician installs at your plant Minimal downtime · no roll shipping

A Fluoron technician arrives at your facility with the spec’d sleeves and the controlled heat equipment, installs on the line, and verifies before signoff. The right path for large rolls, tight outage windows, or sites where shipping the roll out is impractical. Fluoron travels to customer sites internationally for onsite installation.

Best forLarge rolls, tight outage windows, distant or offshore plants
Spec stepAlways first, then onsite visit scheduled
QAVerified on your line before signoff
LogisticsSleeves and heat equipment shipped to the site
Request a site visit →
03: Customer install training Train your team to install Training + ongoing engineering support

For customers running enough sleeves to bring the install in-house, Fluoron runs a training and engineering support program. We certify your maintenance team on the heat-shrink process: sizing, prep, controlled heat, and QA: and stay on the line for engineering support after handoff. Right path for high-volume sleeve programs.

Best forHigh-volume sleeve programs, repeat re-sleeving
Spec stepFluoron specs each sleeve; your team installs
SupportOnsite training + ongoing engineering escalation
QACertification on the heat-shrink process
Ask about training →
B / Bonding · etched vs unetched

When a heat-shrink fit is enough: and when bonding is added

Heat-shrink fluoropolymer roll covers seat mechanically when the sleeve recovers to the roll diameter. Adhesive bonding is added when product family, service conditions, or machine speed push past what the mechanical fit alone covers.

Fluoro-Clear (FEP)
Etched for adhesive bonding, or unetched.

Fluoro-Clear is supplied etched for adhesive bonding or unetched as a heat-shrink mechanical fit. Etched and bonded construction is selected when service temperature, machine speed, or compression load make a pure mechanical fit insufficient. Unetched is the standard path on most moderate-temperature converting lines. Engineering picks etched vs unetched from the roll details and process description.

Fluoro-Flex (PFA)
Bonding selected from service.

Fluoro-Flex is heat-shrunk into a tight mechanical fit; bonding is added when service temperature, line speed, or flex fatigue load require it. The engineering team makes the call from temperature, speed, and the role of the roller (idler, nip, lamination, etc.).

Fluoro-Wear (PTFE)
Seamed heat-shrink mechanical fit.

Fluoro-Wear is a seamed heat-shrink cover that recovers to the roll diameter for a tight mechanical fit; bonding is added when service conditions require it: common on wet-position paper machinery, spreader rolls, and demanding release positions.

Fluoro-Stat (Conductive PTFE)
Same seamed install, with conductivity.

Fluoro-Stat installs the same way as Fluoro-Wear: seamed heat-shrink cover with mechanical fit and bonding added when service conditions require it. Specified for dry-position rollers where static control matters (spreader, guide, nip, and lamination).

Bonding method is always selected based on product family, service conditions, and machine speed: not as a default on every install. Fluoron engineering specifies etched vs unetched and any adhesive system from the roll details you send.

Before any install path

What to send so engineering can spec the sleeve.

Every install path: ship-in, onsite, or train-your-team : starts with the same step: Fluoron engineering specs the sleeve from the roll details and process description. The more accurate the inputs, the faster the spec.

  • Roll outer diameter (OD) at the cover position.
  • Face length and total length.
  • Base material (steel, aluminum, rubber, composite).
  • Service temperature and any thermal spikes.
  • Line speed and what the roller does (idler, nip, lamination).
  • Static-sensitive line, FDA/medical, or other constraints.
  • What is failing today: sticking, buildup, wear, static.
C / Frequently asked

Installation: FAQ

Answers to the install and bonding questions buyers and engineers send Fluoron most often.

Does Fluoron install onsite at the customer plant?
Yes. A Fluoron technician travels to the customer site with the spec’d sleeves and the controlled heat equipment, installs on the line, and verifies before signoff. Onsite install is the right path for large rolls, tight outage windows, or sites where shipping the roll out is impractical. Fluoron travels internationally for onsite installation.
Can our maintenance team install Fluoron sleeves?
Yes. For customers running enough sleeves to bring the install in-house, Fluoron runs a training and engineering support program: certification on the heat-shrink process (sizing, prep, controlled heat, and QA) with ongoing engineering escalation after handoff.
When is adhesive bonding required?
A heat-shrink fluoropolymer roll cover seats mechanically when the sleeve recovers to the roll diameter under controlled heat. Adhesive bonding is added when product family, service conditions (temperature, chemistry, compression), or machine speed push past what the mechanical fit alone covers. Engineering specifies the bonding method from the roll details and process description: bonding is not a default on every install.
When is Fluoro-Clear (FEP) supplied etched vs unetched?
Fluoro-Clear (FEP) is available etched for adhesive bonding or unetched as a heat-shrink mechanical fit. Etched and bonded construction is selected when service conditions, temperature, or machine speed make a pure mechanical fit insufficient. The engineering team picks etched or unetched from the roll details and the process description.
How long does an install take?
Install time depends on roll size, base material, and access on the line. Fluoron schedules onsite visits to fit the customer’s planned outage window. The sleeve itself is built to spec on a typical 2–4 week lead time, and install is scheduled to sleeve arrival.
What information should we send for a sleeve spec?
Roll outer diameter (OD), face length, base material, service temperature, line speed, the role of the roller (idler, nip, lamination, etc.), any static or FDA / medical constraints, and the failure mode the sleeve is being specified to solve. Engineering returns a recommended fluoropolymer family and cover construction.
D / Keep reading

Related Fluoron resources

Material selection, product detail, applications, and industry references.

Material guide

Side-by-side selection criteria: pick the polymer family before the install path.

Product detail

Fluoro-Clear, Fluoro-Flex, Fluoro-Wear, and Fluoro-Stat: specs, photos, and FAQ.

Applications

Sticking, residue buildup, and downtime patterns from pulp and paper, printing, converting, and plastics.

Industries

How the same sleeve platform shows up across flexible packaging, paper, food, converting, and composites.