• Home
  • Cambric Tape for High‑Dielectric Insulation—Why Choose?
Cambric Tape for High‑Dielectric Insulation—Why Choose? Back to list
Oct . 08, 2025 22:35


Cambric tape in 2025: why this old-school staple still wins in damp, demanding installs

If you work around motors, coils, or frankly any junction box near moisture, you already know the quiet utility of cambric tape. Not flashy. Not algorithmic. Just a tough, wax/varnish-impregnated fabric that keeps connections dry and electrically sound. Lately I’ve been seeing renewed interest, especially for humid sites and rewinds. One product that keeps popping up in shop talk is the Fiberglass Yellow Varnished Insulating Tape, code XF-HLD, out of Tongling, Anhui, China—more on that in a second.

To be honest, what people call cambric tape varies: classic cotton cambric versus modern fiberglass cloth, different varnishes, different outer wraps. In practice, the “yellow wax tape + outer insulation layer” method is still the winning recipe for wet work.

Cambric Tape for High‑Dielectric Insulation—Why Choose?

Product snapshot: Fiberglass Yellow Varnished Insulating Tape (XF-HLD)

Origin: Office Building of Management Committee of Shizishan High-Tech Zone, Tongling, Anhui, China. Many customers say it’s a “set-and-forget” inner moisture barrier—wrap connections with the yellow varnished layer, then finish with PVC electrical tape or a self-fusing outer layer depending on ingress risk.

Spec Typical value (≈) Method / Note
Base fabric Woven fiberglass cloth Alkali-free yarn
Impregnation Yellow varnish/wax system Humidity-barrier layer
Thickness ≈ 0.18–0.25 mm IEC 60454-2
Tensile strength ≥ 400 N/25 mm ASTM D1000
Breakdown voltage ≈ 4.5 kV (single wrap) ASTM D1000; real-world use may vary
Thermal class Class F–H (155–180 °C) Dependant on varnish resin
Adhesion Non-adhesive varnished wrap Used as inner moisture layer
Code XF-HLD Manufacturer code

Process flow and QA (short version)

Materials: alkali-free fiberglass cloth → varnish/wax blend. Methods: controlled dip-impregnation, metered de-wet, multi-stage oven cure, precision slitting (low-fray edges). Testing: thickness, tensile, breakdown voltage, and moisture uptake per ASTM D1000 and IEC 60454; dielectric checks sampled per lot; visual for resin uniformity. Service life: ≈ 10–15 years in enclosed equipment (assuming correct overwrap and load), frankly longer if heat is well-managed. Industries: motor rewinds, transformers, pumps, marine switchgear, mining splices, EV traction auxiliary harnesses.

How pros actually use it

The classic stack: first wrap the joint with the yellow varnished layer (cambric tape behavior), then apply PVC insulation tape or a self-fusing silicone outer wrap, depending on IP target. In very humid cabinets, I’ve seen techs add a third, abrasion layer. It seems basic, but that inner varnish barrier is the difference between “dry for years” and “mystery trip at the worst moment.”

Cambric Tape for High‑Dielectric Insulation—Why Choose?

Vendor landscape (quick comparison)

Vendor / Model Base Temp class Dielectric (≈) Cert/Notes
XF-HLD (QiangDa) Fiberglass + varnish F–H ≈ 4–6 kV single wrap RoHS/REACH; UL/IEC data available on request
3M Scotch 27 (reference) Glass cloth, rubber thermoset Class B/F Datasheet typical UL 510 Listed; IEC 60454 refs
Nitto Glass Cloth (reference) Glass cloth variants F–H Datasheet typical RoHS; IEC 60454 family

Bottom line: if you’re after that cambric tape-style inner barrier with higher tear resistance, fiberglass-based varnished wraps are a solid, cost-sane choice.

Field notes and mini case studies

• Motor rewind shop, coastal climate: switched their joint prep to yellow varnished inner + self-fusing silicone outer. Callbacks dropped noticeably (their word, not mine) during monsoon months.

• Solar inverter OEM: adopted a fiberglass cambric tape layer inside DC bus bar terminations; after 2k-hour 85°C/85% RH stress, insulation resistance stayed within spec, with no visible wicking at edges.

Compliance and documentation

Look for IEC 60454 test references, ASTM D1000 test data, and UL 510 where applicable. RoHS/REACH statements are table stakes now. If you need Class H, ask for the exact resin system in writing—real-world formulations matter more than brochure adjectives.

Sources and standards

  1. IEC 60454 Electrical insulating adhesive tapes (Parts 2/3). https://webstore.iec.ch
  2. ASTM D1000 Standard Test Methods for Pressure-Sensitive Adhesive-Coated Tapes. https://www.astm.org/d1000
  3. UL 510 Standard for Polyvinyl Chloride, Polyethylene, and Rubber Insulating Tape. https://standardscatalog.ul.com
  4. Directive 2011/65/EU (RoHS). https://eur-lex.europa.eu
  5. 3M Scotch Glass Cloth Tape (27/69) Datasheets. https://www.3m.com

If you are interested in our products, you can choose to leave your information here, and we will be in touch with you shortly.