Polyprint surfaces are tested against recognised European and international standards. Every performance claim on this site is grounded in tested conditions — not marketing language.
Request Technical Specifications →Commercial buyers, architects, and facility operators make long-term decisions. A surface that fails under UV stress, impact, or heavy foot traffic is a liability — not a feature. Polyprint surfaces are tested to the same standards demanded by the flooring, ceramics, and building materials industries.
All results below reflect current tested performance. Where testing is ongoing, this is noted clearly. We do not overclaim. We do not undertest.
Testing conducted against established EN ISO and DIN standards using calibrated lab equipment. Results are reported as achieved — not aspirational.
Based on current testing using standardised methods. All results are from tested conditions — specific test sample designations apply where noted.
Tested using Taber Abraser 5155 with Taber Grit Feeder Model Nr. 255 and Aluminium Oxide 240 grit. Achieved classification class 31 in lab conditions — suitable for moderate commercial wear applications.
Tested using Atlas UV Test equipment. After 3000 hours of continuous UV cycle exposure, no observable change to the surface was recorded. The tested print finish maintains colour fidelity and surface integrity under extended UV conditions.
Testing methodology: inclined plane with an 80kg person wearing shoes. Formal slip resistance certification testing is currently in progress. Results will be published on confirmation. Contact us for current status on specific substrates.
Tested with Wegner impact tester using 5mm steel ball. All tested samples exceeded 60N — the maximum measurement capacity of the testing equipment. No damage, cracks, or surface failure at maximum machine rating.
Tested using a polished steel ball (324g ±5g, diameter 42.8mm ±0.2mm). Drops from above 2.0m produced no visible impact, damage, or cracking on tested surface samples. Maximum test height achieved without failure.
Tested using TQC SHEEN Hardness Test (0–300 scale). Sample designations No.1 and No.3 achieved scratch resistance exceeding 15 kN — demonstrating strong resistance to surface scratching under applied force.
Tested using TQC SHEEN Pencil Hardness Test. All sample designations (No.1, No.2, No.3, No.4) achieved a pencil hardness rating of 6H — the highest standard category, indicating an extremely hard coating with excellent resistance to surface penetration.
We can provide detailed test documentation, sample specifications, and substrate-specific data on request.
Contact Us →Suitable for moderate commercial use environments
No observable surface change after 3000 hours UV exposure
Exceeds machine limit — no damage recorded
Maximum pencil hardness rating — extremely hard coating
Strong scratch resistance under applied force testing
Reach out to discuss your application, request test documentation, or ask about substrate-specific performance data.