If you’ve ever laid up fiberglass or carbon fiber and then faced hours of sanding just to get a surface ready for bonding or paint, you know the pain. There’s a better way — one that leaves a clean, textured, bond-ready surface almost automatically. It’s called peel ply, and it’s one of the most practical tools in composite manufacturing.
Peel ply is a specially woven fabric (usually polyester, nylon, or fiberglass) that you apply to the surface of a wet composite laminate before curing. Once the resin hardens, you peel the fabric away. What’s left behind is a uniform, resin-rich, textured surface that’s ideal for secondary bonding, painting, or adding more layers — without heavy abrasion.
During wet layup, vacuum bagging, or resin infusion, you place the peel ply directly against the final reinforcement layer and wet it out with resin. The fabric acts as a sacrificial layer. As the part cures, resin flows into the tight weave. Because the ply is treated with release properties (either inherent or coated), it doesn’t stick permanently.
When you pull it off after full cure, two things happen:
The result is a matte, slightly rough finish that’s far more reliable for bonding than a smooth, resin-rich tool-side surface or inconsistently sanded laminate.
The benefits go well beyond convenience:
Industry experience and testing show that peel ply, when properly selected and applied, produces reliable surfaces for secondary bonding across a wide range of composite systems.
Not all peel plies are the same:
Choose based on your resin system, cure temperature, and whether the bond is structural or cosmetic.
Tencom specializes in custom fiberglass pultrusion — pulling continuous reinforcements through a resin bath and a heated die to create strong, consistent profiles like tubes, rods, angles, and structural shapes. Pultrusion is a closed-die, continuous process, so peel ply isn’t applied the same way as in hand layup.
However, many pultruded FRP plates and profiles are manufactured or specified with peel ply on one or both surfaces precisely so fabricators and OEMs can prepare them quickly for adhesive bonding into larger assemblies. Remove the ply right before bonding, and you get a clean, textured interface ready for structural adhesives.
This is especially valuable in construction, infrastructure, marine, utility, and industrial applications where pultruded components are joined to other parts or structures.
The industry continues to evolve. Recent innovations in carbon pultrusion have even demonstrated techniques that improve bond strength while eliminating traditional peel ply entirely — showing that surface preparation remains an active area of development.
For best results:
Remember: the textured surface is ideal for bonding but usually requires fairing or a primer to achieve a high-gloss cosmetic finish.
Whether you’re building custom pultruded profiles or integrating them into larger bonded structures, understanding peel ply helps you design smarter downstream processes and get better long-term performance from your composite parts.
At Tencom, we bring nearly 30 years of pultrusion expertise to every project — from material selection and profile design to understanding how your parts will be assembled and finished. If you’re working on applications that involve bonding or secondary operations, our team can help you specify the right profiles and surface considerations from the start.
Need help with a custom fiberglass pultruded solution? Reach out — we’re ready to engineer it with you.