In every manufacturing process, there is the potential to improve and refine processes in pursuit of greater efficiencies or better product qualities. New technology will emerge that promises to deliver these gains, but early adopters of en end up paying the premium for investing before solutions are economically available at scale. Of en, the high costs of being early to invest means that first movers fail to profit from moving first. And this is precisely the challenge facing furniture makers when considering the rapid evolution of edgebanding.
For an industry heavily reliant on conventional hot melt adhesive edgebanding, technology changes pose questions as to whether to adopt new methods and where to invest. On one hand, technology advances with polyurethane reactive (PUR) hot melt adhesives are making conventional approaches even better and more cost-effective. On the other, the industry has seen alternative methods emerge like laser edgebanding, which uses specialist laser banding machines to melt adhesives on special edging.