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TYVOK P2 Coated Card Rub-Test and Packaging Failure Checklist for Seller QA

TYVOK P2 Coated Card Rub-Test and Packaging Failure Checklist for Seller QA

Direct Answer

Use a rub-test and packaging-failure checklist before paid coated-card batches: validate handling durability, friction marks, and pack-out stability on the exact stock lot.

Real Buyer Problem

Sellers report coated cards that pass bench checks but fail after handling, packing friction, and shipping movement.

P2 Setup Checklist

  • Run a 30-second dry-rub test on approved sample marks.
  • Run a sleeve-in/sleeve-out packaging friction test.
  • Check edge chipping after card stacking pressure.
  • Reject lots that fail rub or pack-out checks.
  • Archive one pass sample with packing notes per lot.

Job-Fit Table

Buyer situation Fit Practical note
Retail shelf cards Rub + stack test Handling wear appears before readability complaints.
Mailed promo cards Pack-out friction test Mailer movement can scar weak marks.
New coating supplier Full qualification Old approvals are not transferable.
Repeat lot reorder Spot recheck Confirm durability before rush fulfillment.

Why Packaging Failures Matter

Many card complaints start after packing friction, not during bench inspection. Durability checks must happen before paid release.

Rub-Test Scorecard Method

Use a simple pass/fail card for rub resistance, edge cleanliness, and post-pack appearance. Keep results tied to lot ID.

Scope and Safety

Treat coated-card claims as lot-specific and process-verified. Do not assume durability carries across unknown coatings.

What to Validate Before the Next Order

Pair this with first-order proof and small-text validation so readability and handling durability are approved together.

Related P2 and Upgrade Reads

Check Current Product Details

Before promising capability to buyers, confirm current TYVOK P2 head options and workflow details on the live page: https://eu.tyvok.com/products/tyvok-p2-galvo-laser-engraver.

FAQ

Is visual contrast enough for approval?

No. Handling and packaging friction can fail even high-contrast marks.

How many rub cycles should I test?

Use a consistent short cycle and compare against your approved baseline sample.

When should I reject a lot?

Reject when visible wear appears under normal handling simulation.

Do repeat customers still need this check?

Yes, when coating lot or packaging flow changes.

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