What are (all) the visual and tactile clues that a carpet is Polyester?

Mikey P

Administrator
Joined
Oct 6, 2006
Messages
116,683
What clues do you use to determine Poly from Nylon, or Wool for that matter?

We use to be able to rely on the frizz/loose staple fibers but now that the mills have that under control, what clues do you use?
 

Jim Pemberton

MB Exclusive.
Joined
Oct 7, 2006
Messages
12,716
Name
Jim Pemberton
Guitar playing and working in service repair part time through my career here have calloused my fingertips to where I can tell by feel as much as I used to.

Synthetics used to feel more slippery, especially olefin and to an extent polyester. Wool felt more dry.

Now? I just snip a yarn and do the burn test.

I also can't smell as good as I used to, so I go by how the flame acts and the ash acts.

Polys? Black smoke. Hard plastic ash after it cools (AFTER IT COOLS!)

Nylon? White smoke, a little blue at the base of the flame if I can get a good look. Hard plastic ash. See above caution.

Wool? Self extinguishes. Ash crumbles.

And don't do it in the house. Collateral damage from flaming bit dropped by carelessness or pain are real risk.
 

BIG WOOD

The Timminator
Joined
Feb 4, 2016
Messages
14,349
Name
Matt w.
Poly gives its image almost immediately after the first year by showing the matted down look (crushed fibers)

And nylon is good at showing pile distortion (wavy look of pile laying another direction)

And wool is so expensive, the customer will tell you before you step on it. Lol
 
  • Like
Reactions: KevinL

Trip Moses

IMOL
Joined
Sep 19, 2018
Messages
3,624
Name
Trip Moses
I can honestly say that in my 15 years of hackery, carpet ID has never mattered.
 

Hack Attack

Member
Joined
Dec 19, 2017
Messages
5,620
Name
Dan
only wool looks like wool, some of the wool nylon blends mess with your eye/head but wool and nylon get cleaned the same

poly and its variants have crushed traffic lanes regardless how old it is
 
  • Wow
Reactions: KevinL

Dolly Llama

Number 5
Joined
Oct 7, 2006
Messages
31,225
Name
Larry Capitoni
generally "shinier" too







































1687299182384.png


.L.T.A.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Mikey P

Hoody

Administrator
Joined
Oct 24, 2007
Messages
6,425
Name
Steven Hoodlebrink
Years of Experience
20
Anytime the homeowner says "The carpet retailer says I have PET carpet and I got that because I have dogs"
 

SamIam

Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2012
Messages
11,420
Name
sam miller
What clues do you use to determine Poly from Nylon, or Wool for that matter?

We use to be able to rely on the frizz/loose staple fibers but now that the mills have that under control, what clues do you use?
Mostly not crush resistant, and pile reversal.

Olefin is usually cheap crap easy to spot.

Polyester untwist horribly in high traffic areas and heavy use areas.
 

SamIam

Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2012
Messages
11,420
Name
sam miller
I can honestly say that in my 15 years of hackery, carpet ID has never mattered.
The only reason it helps is setting the expectations of cleanability, and how close it will return to looking like new.
 

SamIam

Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2012
Messages
11,420
Name
sam miller
Nylon doesn't have reverse Nap or pooling like polys, and is crush resistant
Poly gives its image almost immediately after the first year by showing the matted down look (crushed fibers)

And nylon is good at showing pile distortion (wavy look of pile laying another direction)

And wool is so expensive, the customer will tell you before you step on it. Lol
 

BIG WOOD

The Timminator
Joined
Feb 4, 2016
Messages
14,349
Name
Matt w.
Nylon doesn't have reverse Nap or pooling like polys, and is crush resistant

I agree with nylon being crush resistant. But I've seen the pile reversal several times on older nylon heavy carpets
 

SamIam

Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2012
Messages
11,420
Name
sam miller

I agree with nylon being crush resistant. But I've seen the pile reversal several times on older nylon heavy carpets
It happens, but polys are notoriously bad
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom