Hi Sobujs,
You’ve raised three very typical but high-impact issues in knit dyeing.
What’s important is — these are often treated as process problems, but in many cases, the root cause actually starts from the polymer and fiber stage.
Let me break this down from a material-first perspective, which we’ve validated across multiple polyester applications.
1. Shade Variation (Batch-to-Batch)
Root cause from polymer level
In polyester, dye uptake is highly sensitive to:
IV fluctuation (Intrinsic Viscosity) → affects amorphous region and dye diffusion
Additive dispersion (TiO₂ / fillers / masterbatch) → impacts micro-uniformity
COOH end group content → influences dye affinity and hydrolysis behavior
👉 Even small inconsistencies at chip level will be amplified during spinning → yarn → dyeing.
1.1 How modified PET chips help
By controlling:
Narrow IV distribution → stable dye diffusion rate
Low oligomer & low COOH → more predictable dyeing behavior
High dispersion masterbatch integration → uniform dye uptake
1.2 We can significantly reduce:
batch-to-batch shade deviation
re-dyeing / correction rates
1.3 Impact on dyeing process
More reproducible dye curves
Less sensitivity to minor process fluctuations
Reduced dependence on operator experience
1.4 Impact on end customer
Better color consistency across lots
Fewer complaints in bulk orders
Stronger brand reliability
2. White Marks / Line Marks (SJ & Lycra Blends)
Root cause from material side
These defects are often linked to:
Surface energy inconsistency of fibers
Poor oil compatibility / residue interaction
Non-uniform dye penetration at micro-level
In Lycra blends, the issue is amplified due to:
different dyeing behavior between PET and elastane
2.1 How modified PET chips help
Through:
Surface-modified PET (hydrophilic / controlled polarity)
Better additive compatibility (spin finish interaction)
Improved cross-section uniformity during spinning
2.2 We can achieve:
more uniform wetting
better dye penetration
reduced “highlighting” of mechanical defects
2.3 Impact on dyeing & finishing
Improved scouring efficiency
More uniform dye absorption
Reduced sensitivity to tension variation
2.4 Impact on fabric & garment
Cleaner appearance (especially in light shades)
Fewer visible streaks or lines after dyeing
Higher first-grade fabric rate
3. Crease Marks (High GSM Fabrics)
Root cause beyond machinery
While often blamed on machine settings, material plays a key role:
Thermal sensitivity of PET (crystallization behavior)
Glass transition response under tension & temperature
Friction coefficient between fibers
👉 Standard PET can “lock in” creases during rapid ताप increase.
3.1 How modified PET chips help
Using:
Low-melting / co-polyester modification
Controlled crystallization rate
Reduced fiber-to-fiber friction
We can:
delay or reduce crease setting
improve fabric mobility during dyeing
3.2 Impact on processing
Wider process window (less risk during heating)
Better fabric movement in jet / soft flow machines
Reduced need for chemical correction
3.3 Impact on final product
Smoother fabric surface
Better hand feel
Higher perceived quality (especially in heavy knits)
4. Why This Matters (Industry Insight)
In many mills, 70–80% of troubleshooting focuses on:
- machine parameters
- dye recipes
- finishing chemicals
But in reality, polymer consistency defines the ceiling of process stability.
👉 If the raw material is unstable, downstream optimization has limited effect.
👉 If the material is engineered correctly, processing becomes more forgiving and efficient.
5. Practical Takeaway
For mills like yours, a combined approach works best:
Stable yarn sourcing (or upstream control)
Optimized dyeing process
AND material-level improvement (where possible)
If you’re open to it, I’d be happy to:
- review one of your actual defect cases
- or suggest a more targeted material approach based on your current yarn specs
Sometimes a small upstream adjustment can save a lot of downstream cost.