ThomasNet Home   |   Promote Your Business
Home  |   My ThomasNet News®  |   Industry Market Trends  |   Submit Release  |   Advertise  |   About Us May 26, 2012  

Electronic Grade Foams protect devices against shock.

Print | 
Email |  Comment   Share  
Electronic Grade Foams protect devices against shock.
Electronic Grade Foams protect devices against shock.

Click Here to Enlarge Picture

January 22, 2002 - Used as shock pads, spacers or snubbers, energy-absorbent CONFOR foams help protect hard disk drives, miniaturized computers, hand-held electronics and PDAs from shock and vibration, with no silicone off-gassing. Semi-open celled foams also provide acoustical insulation. CF-40E low-stiffness formulation and CF-45E medium stiffness formulation meet HF-1 of Underwriter's Laboratory's UL94 flame standards at 2mm and 2.5mm thicknesses.

(Archive News Story - Products mentioned in this Archive News Story may or may not be available from the manufacturer.)
Original Press release

E-A-R Specialty Composites
7911 Zionsville Rd.
Indianapolis, IN, 46268 1650
USA


E-A-R Offers Electronic-Grade Formulation Of CONFOR(R) Foam

Two non-silicone formulations of highly damped, slow-recovery CONFOR® foam now are available from E-A-R Specialty Composites. Both CF-40E-a low-stiffness formulation-and CF-45E-a medium stiffness formulation-meet HF-I of Underwriter's Laboratory's UL94 flame standards, at 2-mm and 2.5-mm thicknesses.

CONFOR CF-E-grade foams specifically address the shock protection needs of today's hard disk drives, miniaturized computers, hand-held electronics and personal digital assistants (PDAs). Used as shock pads, spacers or snubbers, the energy-absorbent foams help protect delicate components from shock and vibration, with no silicone off-gassing. The semi-open celled foams provide acoustical insulation as well.

Even as thin as 2 mm, CONFOR CF-E cushions and shock pads absorb and dissipate up to 97 percent of shock energy, without recoiling and amplifying the effect. In hard disk drives, they help protect against handling-related damage. In electronic devices, they help prevent circuit boards from colliding, speakers from crashing into the shell and LCD screens from cracking. Used as speaker and microphone seals, they can reduce audio distortion and background noise.

Non-silicone CONFOR CF-E foams have virtually the same physical and dynamic performance properties as the comparable, classic CONFOR formulations. Like all CONFOR formulations, CF-E foams are engineered to compress and conform under sustained pressure, and to slowly rebound when the weight is released. But when the foams receive a direct impact, they behave like semi-rigid foams, resist collapse and absorb the impact internally.

E-A-R Specialty Composites is a leading manufacturer and supplier of high performance materials that control unwanted mechanical energy-noise, vibration, shock and motion.
Print | 
Email |  Comment   Share  
Contacts: View detailed contact information.


 

Post a comment about this story

Name:
E-mail:
(your e-mail address will not be posted)
Comment title:
Comment:
To submit comment, enter the security code shown below and press 'Post Comment'.
 



 See related product stories
Don’t hunt for stories like this.
Let Materials & Material Processing
Product News Come to You!
Get a Free Subscription
to Product News Alerts.
Start Your Free
Subscription to
Industry Market Trends.
 See more product news in:
Materials and Material Processing
 More New Product News from this company:
Molding Material is offered in halogen-free formulation.
Acoustical Foam meets UL smoke and flame standard.
Composite blocks engine heat and noise.
Damping Material stops noise and vibration in equipment.
More ....
 Tools for you
Watch Company 
View Company Profile
Company web site
More news from this company
E-Mail Story
Save Story
Search for suppliers of
Foam
Join the forum discussion at:
Hard to Handle


Home  |  My ThomasNet News®  |  Industry Market Trends  |  Submit Release  |  Advertise  |  Contact News  |  About Us
Brought to you by Thomasnet.com        Browse ThomasNet Directory

Copyright © 2012 Thomas Publishing Company
Terms of Use - Privacy Policy



Error close

Please enter a valid email address