Custom Polyurethane Rubber Rollers

Polyurethane rubber rollers,  are often used where the roller needs better wear resistance, stable grip, load support, and longer surface life.

They are commonly used in drive, traction, pinch, pressure, slitting, rewinding, conveying, and other repeated-contact positions. In these positions, the roller surface often works under friction, pressure, load, or long running hours.

Hardness, cover thickness, formulation, surface finish, bonding, roller accuracy, and the real working condition all affect the final result.At the same time, depending on the formulation, polyurethane rollers can also be adapted for some more demanding applications.

You do not need everything ready before contacting us.

Green polyurethane rollers with machined steel shaft ends

Why Many Projects Consider Polyurethane Rollers

Polyurethane is often used when a roller cover needs more than basic rubber contact.

In many roller positions, the surface needs to resist wear, keep enough grip, support pressure, and stay stable during long running hours. PU is useful because it can combine these needs in one cover material.

Common reasons to review PU include:

the old rubber cover wears too fast

the roller needs better grip during running

the roller works under repeated pressure

the surface needs to last longer

the position needs both traction and wear resistance

the cover needs to be adjusted by hardness, thickness, or surface finish

This is why PU is often used for traction rollersdrive rollerspinch rollers, and other positions where movement, pressure, and wear happen at the same time.

What PU Rollers Usually Need to Solve

Many PU roller projects start from a running problem.

Problem Seen on the Line What May Need Review
The roller wears too fast Hardness, formulation, surface finish, and cover thickness
The roller slips Surface grip, pressure, contact material, and roller accuracy
The surface becomes shiny or glazed Heat, friction, cleaning method, or contact condition
Edge damage appears Edge pressure, tracking, material width, or local contact
The cover cracks or debonds Heat, bonding, cover thickness, load, or media contact
Service life drops after speed increases Heat build-up, pressure, friction, and process margin

A PU roller review should not stop at “make the same roller again.” It should check why the old roller failed or why the running condition changed.

Common Parameters and Customization Direction

Common reference ranges for polyurethane rollers:

Typical hardness range:

about 60–95 Shore A

Lower hardness direction:

more suitable for positions requiring softer contact, cushioning, or lighter surface pressure

Higher hardness direction:

more commonly used in applications that place more emphasis on wear resistance, load-bearing performance, and service life

Continuous operating temperature:

standard polyurethane formulations are usually better kept within about 90°C

More demanding applications:

a more targeted polyurethane solution can be further evaluated

Surface finishes:

depending on the application, options can include smooth, ground, traction-oriented, grooved, crowned, and other directions

How the solution is confirmed:

hardness, surface, and structural direction can be confirmed based on drawings, samples, an existing roller for replacement, or the actual operating conditions

Polyurethane Roller Hardness and Cover Thickness

Hardness is important, but it should not be checked alone.

A softer PU cover may give better contact and cushioning. It can be useful when the pressure is lighter or the material surface needs gentler contact.

A harder PU cover may give better support and wear resistance. It is often reviewed for drive, traction, pinch, pressure, and other repeated-contact positions.

Cover thickness also matters. A thicker cover can give more wear margin and cushioning, but it may also hold more heat in high-speed or high-load positions. A thinner cover may give better support in some structures, but it gives less wear allowance.

So the roller should be reviewed by hardness, cover thickness, formulation, bonding, surface finish, speed, load, and contact material together.

Blue polyurethane rollers with machined steel shafts

Surface Finish and Cover Structure

For PU rollers, the surface is not only about appearance. It affects grip, contact, cleaning, wear, and running stability.

Surface or Structure Common Purpose
Smooth finish General contact and easier cleaning
Ground finish Better diameter control and surface consistency
Traction-oriented finish Better grip when slipping is a concern
Grooved surface Drainage, air release, grip adjustment, or special process contact
Crowned surface Helps with pressure distribution in some wider roller positions
Matte or fine-textured surface Softer surface feel and less aggressive contact in some applications
Thicker cover More wear margin and cushioning, but possible heat build-up risk
Thinner cover Better support in some structures, but less wear allowance

Smooth finish

General contact and easier cleaning

Ground finish

Better diameter control and surface consistency

Traction-oriented finish

Better grip when slipping is a concern

Grooved surface

Drainage, air release, grip adjustment, or special process contact

Crowned surface

Helps with pressure distribution in some wider roller positions

Matte or fine-textured surface

Softer surface feel and less aggressive contact in some applications

Thicker cover

More wear margin and cushioning, but possible heat build-up risk

Thinner cover

Better support in some structures, but less wear allowance

This is why a PU roller should not be confirmed only by size and hardness. Surface, cover thickness, core condition, and bonding can all change the final result.

Higher-Performance PU Roller Cover Directions

Some PU roller projects need more than a general polyurethane cover.

When the roller runs under heavier wear, higher load, stronger traction demand, longer working hours, or more unstable contact, the PU cover may need to be adjusted in a more targeted direction.

Common higher-performance PU roller directions include:

wear-resistant PU covers

for repeated friction, edge wear, and long-running surface contact

abrasion-resistant polyurethane rollers

for positions where the surface wears too quickly

high-load PU rollers

for positions that need stronger support under pressure

high-traction polyurethane rollers

for drive, traction, feeding, or pulling positions

hydrolysis-resistant PU directions

for wet or humid conditions

higher-bonding-strength PU roller covers

for repeated load, dynamic running, or heavier stress

application-specific PU formulations

when standard PU is not enough for the real working condition

This does not mean every project needs a special PU compound. For many normal replacement rollers, a standard PU direction may already be enough.

The higher-performance direction should only be reviewed when the working condition actually requires it.

Polyether and Polyester Polyurethane Direction

Polyurethane rollers can also be reviewed by formulation direction. Two common directions are polyether-based PU and polyester-based PU.

PU Direction Usually Reviewed When
Polyether-based PU Moisture, water contact, cleaning sections, or hydrolysis resistance matter more
Polyester-based PU Wear resistance, dry contact, mechanical strength, and load support matter more
Special PU formulations Standard PU is not enough for abrasion, temperature, oil contact, wet conditions, or dynamic load

Polyether-based PU

Moisture, water contact, cleaning sections, or hydrolysis resistance matter more

Polyester-based PU

Wear resistance, dry contact, mechanical strength, and load support matter more

Special PU formulations

Standard PU is not enough for abrasion, temperature, oil contact, wet conditions, or dynamic load

This does not mean one type is always better. The better direction depends on where the roller runs, what it touches, how it is cleaned, and what problem it needs to solve.

For example, a roller used in a dry, high-wear position may be reviewed differently from a roller used in a wet or frequently cleaned position. Both may still be called PU rollers, but the formulation direction can be different.

Heat Build-Up in PU Roller Design

Heat build-up is easy to miss in PU roller projects.

PU is often selected for wear resistance and load support. But when the roller runs under high load, high speed, repeated pressure, or long friction contact, heat may build up inside the cover.

When heat cannot move out well, the roller may still fail even if the surface looks wear-resistant.

Common signs include:

the cover hardens earlier than expected

cracks appear near the working surface or edge

bonding becomes weaker

the surface becomes shiny or glazed

traction becomes unstable after running for some time

service life becomes shorter after speed increases

Yellow polyurethane rollers packed on a truck for shipment

For this reason, a thicker PU cover is not always better. In some positions, a balanced design is safer: suitable hardness, controlled cover thickness, good bonding, enough core support, and the right surface finish.

Simple Application Review Examples

The examples below show how PU roller review usually starts. They are not fixed solutions. The final direction still depends on the actual line.

Traction roller with slipping and fast wear

If the roller turns but the material does not move steadily, and the surface wears or becomes shiny after running, the review should not only check the material.

It should also check surface finish, pressure, roller accuracy, contact material, line speed, and whether the paired roller is already worn.

Drive roller under heavier load

If the roller is used for power transfer and the old cover wears quickly or loses grip, PU may be reviewed for stronger support.

But cover thickness and heat build-up also need attention. In heavier-load positions, making the cover thicker is not always the safer answer.

Pinch or pressure roller with repeated compression

If the roller works in paired contact, the cover needs to hold pressure without losing shape too quickly.

PU may help when stronger support and longer surface life are needed. But if the contact material is sensitive, hardness and surface finish need to be selected carefully.

Slitting or rewinding position with edge wear

If the roller wears faster near the edge, the issue may not only be the rubber material.

Edge pressure, web path, winding tension, tracking condition, and the old wear pattern should also be checked.

Where Polyurethane Rollers Are Commonly Used

PU rollers are often used where wear resistance, grip, and support need to work together.

Common positions include:

The exact design still depends on contact material, line speed, pressure, temperature, roller structure, and the current problem.

Custom Roller Manufacturing, Formulations, and Quality Control

A reliable rubber roller depends on more than size matching. Compound formulation, hardness stability, cover thickness, surface finish, shaft structure, and running accuracy all affect how the roller performs on your line.

Wolorin supports both routine replacement roller projects and more demanding custom industrial rubber roller projects, with established manufacturing experience, production equipment, inspection equipment, available certificates, and documented quality checks. Our rubber compound formulation system can be matched to different operating requirements.

Before shipment, key items such as cover hardness, shaft details, surface condition, and running accuracy can be checked according to project requirements.

You can review our manufacturing scope, quality control process, and company background through the pages below.

Frequently Asked Questions

In many applications, yes. But the final result still needs to be judged based on speed, pressure, the contact material, and the wear pattern.

Standard polyurethane is usually more suitable for moderate continuous temperature conditions.
If long-term heat contact is more significant, a more targeted polyurethane solution usually needs to be evaluated, or other material directions may also need to be considered together.

In many cases, yes.
But traction is not determined by the material alone. It is also related to hardness, surface condition, pressure, and the roller’s actual function on the line.

Yes.
If you have photos of the existing roller, basic dimensions, the roller position, the contact material, and the current problem, that is usually enough to start a first-round material review.

Request a Quote

If you already have drawings, samples, an existing roller, or current parameters, you can send them directly to us for quotation.
If the information is not complete yet, you can also start by providing the roller position, operating temperature, contact media, and the current issue. The project can still begin from this basic information.