Carpet Construction

Find out how a STAINMASTER® carpet goes from fiber to floor covering. Here's an overview of the steps involved in carpet construction.

Bulked Continuous Filament (BCF)
Continuous strands of nylon are formed into yarn. They are also texturized to increase their bulk and to change from straight into kinked or curled fibers. This increases the "bulk" of the final carpet and makes the twist in yarns more permanent producing better wear resistance. And because BCF (Bulked Continuous Filament) fiber is one continuous strand of fiber, it will not shed loose fibers like staple fibers will, causing the owner to constantly vacuum to remove them.

Twist
Each carpet fiber is twisted around more fibers to produce a yarn for the carpet pile that is more wear resistant. The tighter the twist, the more the carpet will resist crushing, matting and changes in texture.

Heat Setting
After the fiber is twisted, it is treated with heat to lock in the twist. The result: carpet fibers that won't easily unravel or crush under heavy foot traffic.

Tufting
The heat-set fiber is fed through needles and then stitched or tufted into the primary carpet backing. The density of a carpet is determined by how much yarn is used and how close the tufts are to one another.

Dyeing
The tufted carpet is saturated with liquid dye then treated with a solution to set the color.

Protectant
The dyed carpet is now saturated with a unique soil and stain resistant coating engineered to bond specifically with STAINMASTER® 6,6 nylon. While other fibers are protected by a stain resistant treatment as well, their treatment must be re-applied after every cleaning while STAINMASTER® protection is guaranteed to last for years without reapplication. The result is a carpet that has the long lasting ability to repel dirt and resist stains.




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