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Supplier for NYLON in Meghalaya

NYLON  30% GLASS FIIELD NYLON Grinding Injection Molding chittagong chittagong division bangladesh Plastic4trade

$ 650

NYLON 30% GLASS FIIELD

NYLON | Injection Molding

Chittagong Division, Bangladesh

REGRIND PA 6 GF NYLON Grinding Injection Molding chittagong chittagong division bangladesh Plastic4trade

$ 600

REGRIND PA 6 GF

NYLON | Injection Molding

Chittagong Division, Bangladesh

REGRIND PA 6 NYLON Grinding Injection Molding chittagong chittagong division bangladesh Plastic4trade

$ 600

REGRIND PA 6

NYLON | Injection Molding

Chittagong Division, Bangladesh

REGRIND PC, ABS, HIPS, POM, PA6, SILICONE RUBBER, PC CD DVD, PET LUMPS  FROM BANGLADESH NYLON Flakes Mix Scrap chittagong chittagong division bangladesh Plastic4trade

$ 700

NYLON BAGS NYLON Finish Goods Film Grade madla west bengal india Plastic4trade

₹ 23

NYLON BAGS

NYLON | Film Grade

West Bengal, India

PLASTIC NYLON LUMPS NYLON Lumps Injection Molding jamshedpur jharkhand india Plastic4trade

₹ 25

PLASTIC NYLON LUMPS

NYLON | Injection Molding

Jharkhand, India

NLYON LUMPS NYLON Scrap Injection Molding jamshedpur jharkhand india Plastic4trade

₹ 30

NLYON LUMPS

NYLON | Injection Molding

Jharkhand, India

PP NON-WOVEN NYLON Grinding Roto Molding uttar pradesh india Plastic4trade

₹ 28

PP NON-WOVEN

NYLON | Roto Molding

Uttar Pradesh 275101, India

Buyer for NYLON in Meghalaya

NYLON NATURAL GRINULE NYLON Prime/Virgin Injection Molding undefined west bengal india Plastic4trade

₹ 135

NYLON NATURAL GRINULE

NYLON | Injection Molding

West Bengal, India

NYLON PLASTI NIWAR PATTA ROLL NYLON Rolls Extrusion undefined odisha india Plastic4trade

₹ 100

NYLON PLASTI NIWAR PATTA ROLL

NYLON | Extrusion

Odisha, India

NYLON TARPAULIN SHEET NYLON Finish Goods Sheet Film Grade nagpur maharashtra india Plastic4trade

₹ 130

NYLON TARPAULIN SHEET

NYLON | Film Grade

Maharashtra, India

NYLON 6 BLACK REPROCESSED GRANULES NYLON Reprocess Granule Injection Molding aligarh uttar pradesh india Plastic4trade

₹ 62

NYLON 6 BLACK REPROCESSED GRANULES

NYLON | Injection Molding

Uttar Pradesh, India

NAYALON  GARALULES NYLON Reprocess Granule Injection Molding aligarh uttar pradesh india Plastic4trade

₹ 62

NAYALON GARALULES

NYLON | Injection Molding

Uttar Pradesh, India

NYLON 6 BLACK NYLON Scrap Injection Molding india Plastic4trade

₹ 100

NYLON 6 BLACK

NYLON | Injection Molding

, India

NYLON NYLON Scrap Pipe india Plastic4trade

₹ 20

NYLON

NYLON | Pipe

, India

HDPE NYLON Reprocess Granule Injection Molding india Plastic4trade

₹ 150

HDPE

NYLON | Injection Molding

, India

 

Nylon (Polyamide / PA): A Practical Guide to Types, Uses, Production, Market, and Recycling

 

1. What Is Nylon?


Nylon’s one of those materials that’s almost everywhere. It’s a synthetic engineering plastic—the real term is “polyamide”—and it doesn’t really care if you need something tough, flexible, lightweight, or all three. Nylon’s found its way into car engines, clothes, machine parts, kitchen gadgets, even electrical stuff. People keep picking it because it’s durable, takes a beating, doesn’t mind the heat, and keeps weight down. That’s exactly why so many industries lean on it so much.

 

Key Features

 

 

  • Strong and reliable
  • Doesn’t wear down easily
  • Handles heat well
  • Light but sturdy
  • Low friction, so moving parts actually move
  • Works for both big machines and your favorite shirt

 

2. Nylon Types and Grades


Nylon comes either “virgin” (made from fresh chemicals) or recycled. Virgin nylon’s used for jobs where performance can’t slip—think cars and machinery. Recycled nylon gets a new shot, made out of stuff that would otherwise be waste (old textiles or production scraps).

 

Some typical types:

 

 

  • Nylon 6 (PA6): Found in machinery, gear parts, and lots of industrial goods.
  • Nylon 66 (PA66): Trust it where extra heat and stiffness are needed, like automotive stuff.
  • Glass-Filled Nylon: With glass fibers mixed in, it gets even tougher.
  • Flame Retardant Nylon: For electrical parts that can’t risk catching fire.
  • Textile Grade: For threads, yarns, fabrics.
  • Oil-Filled Nylon: Lubricated for parts that see constant scraping and sliding.

 

Other grades exist too—injection molding, extrusion, reinforced, flame-resistant, food-safe, high-impact—you name it, there’s probably a nylon for it.

 

3. Nylon’s Many Uses


Nylon shows up almost anywhere if you look close:

 

Cars: Gears, engine components, bushings, fuel lines
Textiles: Clothing, carpets, ropes, industrial fibers
Electrical: Cable ties, connectors, switches, shells for electronics
Manufacturing: Bearings, rollers, conveyor belts, machine parts
Consumer goods: Sports gear, kitchen tools, luggage
Medical: Certain reusable tools and durable devices

 

4. How’s Nylon Made?


It all begins with chemistry. Producers take chemicals like caprolactam (for Nylon 6) or mix acids and diamines (for Nylon 66), kick off a reaction, and—after tweaking with reinforcements, lubricants, or other additives—turn the result into little resin pellets.

 

Those pellets? They’re turned into real-world products by:

 

 

  • Injection molding
  • Extrusion
  • Spinning fibers
  • Blow molding
  • CNC machining

 

5. What Does Nylon Become?

 

 

  • Gears, rollers, and bearings for factories and cars
  • Strong fibers for clothes and carpets
  • Cable ties for organizing wires
  • Ropes for both work and sailing
  • Sports equipment (string for tennis racquets, helmet innards)
  • Hard-to-break machine parts

 

Nylon’s Greener Future: Biodegradable Uses


Classic nylon holds up for ages—sometimes too long. That’s why there’s growing interest in recycled or even bio-based nylons. These newer versions turn up as fabrics designed to last (and get recycled), reusable tech parts, or even industrial bits that stick around for decades instead of filling up landfills.

 

Recyclable fibers for clothes and upholstery
Engineering parts that get reused or melted down
Industrial tools and components meant to last

 

6. Nylon Recycling—What Happens to Your Old Stuff?


Old nylon doesn’t have to go to waste. Here’s the usual path:

 

 

  • Collect it
  • Sort it
  • Clean it
  • Shred or grind it up
  • Remelt and reshape into new pellets

 

Those recycled pellets get their second wind as car parts, machine gears, textiles, or new gadgets. You’ll usually spot recycled nylon as resin code 7 (“Other Plastics”). Every bit recycled means less piling up as trash.

 

7. Where’s the Nylon Marketplace?


Looking to buy, sell, or find suppliers?:

 

 

  • Plastic4trade
  • Alibaba
  • IndiaMART
  • TradeIndia

Or wander into a plastics, textile, or engineering fair—sometimes LinkedIn does the trick too for finding the serious players.

 

8. Nylon Raw Material Makers


Top producers in India:

 

 

  • SRF Limited
  • Reliance Industries Limited
  • BASF India
  • Lanxess India
  • DSM Engineering Materials India

 

Big names worldwide:

 

 

  • BASF SE (Germany)
  • DuPont (USA)
  • Lanxess AG (Germany)
  • Ascend Performance Materials (USA)
  • DSM Engineering Materials (Netherlands)

 

9. Nylon Market Snapshot


Business is booming. Nylon’s only getting more popular, especially across Asia-Pacific, Europe, North America, and the Middle East. Drivers? Lightweight car parts, more robotics, bigger textile demand, and engineering that needs tough—yet not heavy—materials. Sure, it’s a bit pricier than some basic plastics and picks up moisture (which can mess with shapes in exacting applications). And yes, waste is a growing concern, but recycling’s helping take the edge off.

 

Nylon Properties: The Stuff That Matters

 

 

  • Density: 1.10–1.16 g/cm³
  • Tensile Strength: 60–90 MPa
  • Heat Resistance: It holds up well
  • Wear Resistance: Top-notch
  • Chemical Resistance: Pretty solid
  • Soaks up moisture: Medium amount
  • Toughness: High impact strength
  • Friction: Low—good for moving, sliding parts

 

10. Why Nylon? Because it lasts, shrugs off punishment, doesn’t mind the heat, and just works.

 

Pros:

 

  • Very strong, wears well
  • Handles heat
  • Not heavy
  • Low friction (so moving parts move better)
  • Works for countless industrial jobs

 

Cons:

 

 

  • Absorbs moisture, which can change its size and shape
  • More expensive than basic plastics
  • Not naturally biodegradable
  • Production requires care and control

 

In Closing


Nylon’s everywhere for a reason. It’s tough, stays light, and just plain reliable—from cars to threads to gadgets. With recycling on the rise and new greener versions showing up, nylon’s not fading out anytime soon.

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