For window and door manufacturers, verifying surface treatment is a critical step in ensuring reliable bonding performance. Many manufacturers rely on dyne pens to verify plasma treatment on vinyl components prior to bonding.
Over time, the limitations of dyne inks became increasingly problematic:
These challenges prompted one manufacturer to look for a more reliable surface verification method—without disrupting existing supplier and customer expectations.
The manufacturer identified the Surface Analyst as a potential alternative. Unlike dyne inks, the Surface Analyst provides non-destructive, quantitative measurements of surface condition using contact angle analysis.
However, one key concern remained: Dyne values were the common language used across suppliers and customers.
To address this concern, the manufacturer worked closely with Brighton Science’s applications lab to correlate existing dyne specifications with quantitative contact angle measurements.
Through controlled testing and analysis, the lab helped establish equivalent contact angle targets that aligned with the manufacturer’s historical dyne-based requirements. This approach allowed the customer to:
Importantly, this was a transitional effort, designed to support adoption and specification alignment, not an ongoing testing model. Once equivalency targets were established, the manufacturer was able to rely on repeatable, non-destructive contact angle measurements for routine surface verification.
Once implemented, the Surface Analyst was not limited to a single verification point. The manufacturer began using it to verify plasma treatment on additional plastic components within the window assembly process.
As a result, surface verification became:
This evolution helped the manufacturer move beyond simple pass/fail checks toward a more controlled, data-driven approach to surface quality.
While this case focused on improving surface verification at the point of measurement, many manufacturers face a broader challenge:
How do you manage, compare, and scale surface data across lines, plants, and suppliers?
That’s where connected data platforms come into play.
Surface measurements are most powerful when they’re visible, comparable, and actionable.
BConnect is Brighton Science’s cloud-based platform designed to help manufacturers:
If your team is moving beyond manual verification and toward standardized surface quality management, BConnect helps turn measurements into insight.