For distributors, installers, and OEM customers A TPU PPF can be evaluated through five major aspects: physical performance, chemical resistance, coating quality, adhesive performance, installation behavior, and aging resistance.

1.Thickness — Basic Standard High-quality PPF should meet:

• Standard TPU PPF: 7–8.5 mil (175–215 μm)

• Premium Grade: 9–10 mil (225–250 μm)

• Below 6.5 mil usually indicates inferior or downgraded material.

2.Anti-Yellowing Performance (UV Resistance) To test yellowing resistance:

• Put the TPU sample into a UV aging chamber (UVA-340)

• After 8 hours: No obvious yellowing

• After 24 hours: Slight warm tone is normal

• Quick yellowing = non-aliphatic TPU or recycled TPU

Top Coating Quality (Hydrophobic + Self-Healing + Scratch Resistance)

(1) Hydrophobic Performance (Water Contact Angle) • Qualified: 95°–110° • Premium: 110°–125°
Angles below 90° indicate weak or missing top coating.

(1) Self-Healing Test

Scratch the surface lightly with a metal key, then apply heat:

  • Hot water (80–90°C) or heat gun (60–80°C)
  • High-quality PPF = scratches disappear in 10–30 seconds

Poor PPF will not repair or only partially repairs.

(3) Anti-Scratch Ability Use a hard plastic scraper or 2H pencil: • Good coating: no visible marks • Poor coating: white lines that don’t recover

  1. Adhesive (PSA) Quality — Determines Lifting, Residue, and Durability (1) Tack Level • Should be medium–high tack • Must NOT feel overly sticky or stringy
    Stringy glue = poor adhesive formulation.

(2) Residue Test

Apply film to a clean painted panel for 24 hours → then peel:

  • Qualified: no glue residue, no ghost marks
  • Unqualified: residue, hazing, whitening, or glue transfer

(3) Edge Lifting Test

Apply film to a complex curved area and wait 48 hours:

  • Qualified: stable edges, no lifting
  • Unqualified: edges raise or shrink inward

5. Stretch & Mechanical Performance

High-quality aliphatic TPU should reach:

  • Tensile Strength: > 30 MPa
  • Elongation at Break: > 300%

Simple manual test:

  • TPU: soft, stretchy, and does not whiten when pulled
  • TPE/PVC: stiff, whitens or tears easily

6. Scratch Resistance (Hardness / Abrasion)

Quick test:

  • Use a 2H pencil at 45°
  • Qualified: no visible scratches
  • Poor film: instant damage

Professional lab test:

  • Taber Abrasion (1000g, 1000 cycles)
    Premium TPU shows very low wear.

7. Shrinkage Test (Dimensional Stability)

Apply film to a flat board (20×20 cm), mark edges, leave for 72 hours:

  • Qualified: ≤ 1 mm shrinkage
  • Medium quality: 1–3 mm
  • Low-end TPU: 3–6 mm

More shrinkage = unstable base material.

8. Quick On-Site Tests (30 Minutes, No Instruments Needed)

(1) Hot Water Self-Healing Test

Pour 80°C hot water → surface scratches should heal.

(2) Peel Test

Check for whitening, glue strings, and residue.
Residue = fail.

(3) Burn Test (Edge Only!)

Use a lighter on the edge for 1–2 seconds:

  • TPU: curls slightly, minimal smoke
  • PVC/TPE: black smoke, bad smell, dripping

(4) Manual Stretch Test

TPU = flexible and elastic
PVC/TPE = stiff, white lines appear

Common characteristics of substandard TPU paint protection film indicate poor quality if any of the following occur:
• Yellowing within weeks
• Surface easily attracts dirt
• Whitening when stretched
• Peeling at complex curves
• Orange peel texture after heating
• Residue left upon removal
• No self-healing capability or weak self-healing effect
• Deformation or shrinkage under sunlight
If 2-3 characteristics appear simultaneously → High likelihood of inferior or counterfeit TPU

Translated with DeepL.com (free version)

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