Vinyl How It's Made
While a home consists of what’s under your roof; family,  friends, and furnishings, don’t forget what’s under your feet. Your floors also  have a huge influence on your home and your home life. In this section, we  explain how vinyl is made. This information can be very advantageous because it  enables you to understand the product’s materials and evaluate its performance  aspects: why certain vinyl floors wear better and longer.
Rotogravure Construction:
  - Most commonly used method for making residential  vinyl floors
- Offers unlimited possibilities in pattern and  design
- Process involves a print cylinder that spins  around while the vinyl's core layer (called the gel coat) passes underneath
- Cylinder systematically prints various colored  ink dyes to create the pattern
- After the print dyes are set a clear wearlayer  is applied to the surface
- Appearance retention depends on the durability  of the wearlayer
Wearlayer:
  - Absolutely critical to the performance of your  vinyl floor
- Thickness varies with each product collection
- Generally measured in mils
- Thickness of a mil is about the same as a page  in a phone book
- More expensive vinyl floors have thicker  wearlayers
Performance Characteristics:
  - Easy to clean
- Stays looking like new
- Resists staining from normal household products
- Doesn't show scratches easily
- Easy to clean up spills
- When a floor begins to look old, it is caused by  hundreds of fine hairline scratches in the wearlayer