• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    611 hours ago

    Not magnetic, but it can get statically charged and be attracted to stuff and even stick on the non stick side. However this is usually just a pain in the butt and not an intended feature.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      -1216 hours ago

      bit why is it the same color as metal and why does it stick to everything better than normal tape? 🤨

      • FuglyDuck
        link
        English
        1916 hours ago

        It’s gray to blend in with sheet metal ducting. there’s really no reason it has to be gray though, with plenty of brands offering other colors or patterns. It’s just tradition at this point- you expect duct tape to be gray, so they make it gray.

        What makes duck or duct tap duct tape is that it’s a pressure sensitive adhesive, with a fabric backing and some kind of plastic layer to “waterproof” it, as well as a fabric that’s woven in such a way as to be tearable by hand (and not shears, like other fabric tapes of the time.)

        this form was originally developed during WW2 as a means of sealing ammo cans for the war, and was the army’s olive drab in color.

        it switched to gray in color after WW2 when it became common to use it to wrap/seal air ducts.

        As for why it sticks to everything better than “normal” tape, it depends on what you mean by “normal” tape. If you mean cellophane-packed tape (the clear plastic stuff, typically called scotch tape or packing tape), it doesn’t actually. It just has more adhesive (which is impregnated into the fabric backing). the adhesive is actually (basically) the same pressure sensitive stuff. That is to say, the adhesive in the tape is activated by applying pressure to the tape; rather than a solvent that evaporates off (like glues, CA, Elmers, etc).

        If you mean something like masking or painter’s tape, or gaffer’s tape, it’s because the tape is designed with a different adhessive and these are meant to be temporary.

        also, just for the record, magnets would only stick to ferromagnetic materials (stuff that contains iron, basically.) but there’s no adhesive involved. If you made a simple electromagnet by wrapping wire around an iron/steel nail, and touching the wire to a battery’s terminals, when you turn it off it would stop being attracted to things and just pop off.

      • @ChicoSuave
        link
        1416 hours ago

        The color is from aluminum, a non magnetic metal. The adhesive is separate from the backing.

        Duct tape relies on what’s known as a pressure-sensitive adhesive (PSA) for its inherent stickiness. PSAs are soft polymer blends that exploit van der Waals forces to join two objects together. The strength of the bond is due to the fact that the adhesive is hard enough and its viscoelastic properties are powerful enough to resist flow when stressed.

        Source

      • PlzGivHugs
        link
        fedilink
        English
        3
        edit-2
        11 hours ago

        That article doesn’t cover it, but the reason its called duck tape, is because its predecessor was made from duck cloth (a think fabric) with “duck” being a loanword from Dutch “doek”. Modern duck tape was just an improved, standardized version of this fabric tape. Later on, “duck tape” was warped to “duct tape” for its common use on ducts.

      • @meco03211
        link
        513 hours ago

        This smells like duck propaganda.

        • FuglyDuck
          link
          English
          313 hours ago

          Quack quack!

          (Though, “cotton duck” was the material originally used as the cloth backing. It was another term for “canvas”,)

      • 👍Maximum Derek👍
        link
        fedilink
        English
        413 hours ago

        The military called the waterproof, cloth-backed, green tape 100-mile-per-hour tape because they could use it to fix anything, from fenders on jeeps to boots.

        According to my Air Force mechanic in Vietnam uncle, they called it 100 mph tape, because that was roughly the speed it would peel off the fuselage of a plane.