Customization: | Available |
---|---|
Surface Treatment: | Smooth |
Color: | Customized |
Suppliers with verified business licenses
Audited by an independent third-party inspection agency
Experience the pinnacle of engineering with our fiberglass louvers, meticulously crafted to ensure peak performance. Each louver is precision-engineered using advanced CNC machine tools, allowing for flawless hole drilling in columns. This meticulous attention to detail ensures that the louvers securely pass through columns and are affixed to frames using specially selected nails and bespoke firing rivets. These rivets, developed through a dedicated design process, guarantee that the louvers remain steadfastly in place, even during transport. Our louvers have been rigorously tested, enduring a 2500-kilometer journey from 100m to 3000m altitudes, withstanding mountain roads with remarkable resilience and security.
Our innovative fiberglass louvers offer exceptional resistance to extreme temperatures, UV exposure, and oxidation, making them both robust and reliable. These versatile louvers are ideal for a variety of applications, such as providing efficient ventilation in factories, electrolysis plants, and cooling towers. They are also perfect for outdoor installations like household air conditioning unit frames, large mechanical structures, and decorative garden community walls.
No | Model | Thickness(mm) | Height(mm) | Width(mm) | Colour | Density of louvers | Other |
1 | BYC-55 | 55 | Customized | Customized | Customized | Customized | |
2 | BYC-80 | 80 | Customized | Customized | Customized | Customized |
1. Are you a manufacturer?
Yes, we are a manufacturer, welcome to visit our factory!
2. What's FRP?
Fiber Reinforced Polymer (FRP) is a composite material made of a polymer matrix reinforced with fibers. The fibres are usually glass, carbon, aramid, or basalt. Rarely, other fibres such as paper or wood or asbestos have been used. The polymer is usually an epoxy, vinylester or polyester thermosetting plastic, and formaldehyde resins are still in use. FRP are commonly used in the aerospace, automotive, marine, construction industries and ballistic armor.