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Greenseal EPDM and Butyl pond liner are both synthetic rubber membranes with exceptional physical properties making them the ideal choice for lining ponds, lakes, lagoons and streams. Despite their different chemical compositions, they look and feel the same.
Continued rise in the cost of Butyl rubber polymer drives the reduction in its application and uses. EPDM developed in 1959 has, over the last 50 years become more widely used in building and civil engineering. We now fabricate far more EPDM liners than Butyl liners due to the competative price and exceptional properties of EPDM that in some instances even out perform the more expensive Butyl option.
Greenseal EPDM is a fish-safe EPDM pond liner geomembrane produced for Gordon Low Products by the same Swedish manufacturer that has supplied our Butyl for more than 30 years.
During production the EPDM is vulcanised (cured under pressure and heat) creating an elastic, chemically stable product with negligible aging through exposure to UV-radiation, atmosphere, chemicals, earth, water and extremes of temperature.
Despite its trade name, Greenseal EPDM is of course black in colour. The initials EPDM are derived from its major components of Ethylene, Propylene, Diene monomer and is an M class rubber. Butyl rubber actually has EPDM in its compound to enhance certain properties.
For more information on Greenseal Lake Liner talk to Gordon Low Products Ltd
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