A core upon which may be wound a strip of material, more specifically, a strip of labels attached to a liner by an adhesive. The core includes a tube having circular cylindrical symmetry and a coating of a temporary adhesive. The adhesive should have less tackiness than that holding the labels to its liner. In more general terms, the adhesive attached to the tube for holding the web should have a tackiness that should not require a pull force to remove common bond paper from the core of more than about five ounces per inch of width with a 90 degree pull. The adhesive should appear at some axial location over at least 85 percent of the circumference of the tube. Preferably, it will occur on at least 95 percent of the circumference. Making the core involves permanently attaching the adhesive to a tube having cylindrical symmetry. Attaching a web proceeds, after making the core, with contacting the core with the web and then rotating the core about the tube's axis of cylindrical symmetry.
A tubular or ring-shaped core for winding pressure-sensitive tape has a paper board body and a release-coated outermost ply formed of a strip of polymer film having a release coating on its outer surface and a tacky adhesive layer on its inner surface. The strip is wound onto the core with one edge of the strip folded outwardly away from the core so as to expose the tacky adhesive layer on the folded edge. This folded edge is overlapped by the opposite edge of the strip, thereby placing the tacky adhesive layers on the two edges in contact with each other. A firm bond between the overlapping edges is achieved by the adhesive-to-adhesive contact. In a preferred embodiment, the overlapping edge of the strip overlaps slightly beyond the folded edge onto the unfolded outer surface of the strip. This unfolded portion is treated to promote adhesion of the overlapping edge thereto. Improved bonding of the polymer strip to the core, and improved conformance of the strip to irregularities in the core surface, are achieved in a preferred embodiment by heating the strip as it is being advanced to the core and applying tension to the heated strip to cause it to stretch as it is wound onto the core.
A tape provides a supply of doubly adhesively faced pads for individual application to a receiving surface. The tape comprises a generally elongate flexible base layer of material having one side with a first release surface, and a plurality of pads of material carried on the first release surface of the base layer arranged in succession along the length of the base layer. Each of the pads has first and second tacky faces facing in opposite directions and has the first of its tacky faces releasably adhered to the first release surface of the base layer. The base layer of material has a second side facing oppositely to the first side and has a second release surface, so that the base layer may be rolled up to bring the second release surface thereof into engagement with the second tacky faces of the pads.