24-HOUR TURNAROUND ON RUSH ORDERS — 603-693-6136 RAYMOND, NH · ALWAYS TAX-FREE · QUOTES IN 1 BUSINESS DAY
NHPT // RESOURCE GUIDE

How to choose cores for slitting & rewinding

A converter checklist for slitting and rewinding cores: ID tolerance, wall spec, edge quality, length accuracy, and the supply questions that prevent line stops.

The rewind deck is where cheap cores get expensive. Use this checklist before you qualify any core supplier — including us.

ID and roundness. Differential shafts and core chucks need a true, consistent ID; out-of-round cores chatter, slip, and mis-tension the web. Ask what tolerance is held and how it is verified per run.

Wall by load, not habit. Slit-roll weight and winding tension set the wall. Over-specifying wastes money on every core; under-specifying crushes at the worst moment. See the crush guide for the variables.

Edges and length. Square-cut, dust-free edges protect web edges and keep automatic core loaders happy; length accuracy keeps slit lanes aligned.

Consistency over time. One good sample proves nothing — ask how the hundredth case matches the first. (Ours are checked on every production run.)

Supply geometry. Cores are freight-heavy. A supplier one state away can refill you in days and hold reserve stock; one four states away cannot. That is the quiet advantage of winding them in Raymond, NH.

// RELATED: slitting & rewinding cores · tape & label cores · core reserve programs

Spec it today. Tubes this week.

Call 603-693-6136
// Questions

FAQ

What ID do slitting cores usually use?

3" ID dominates converting; 6" appears on high-speed and heavy-roll applications. Mixed fleets are common — see our 3" vs 6" guide.

Why do my cores chatter on the shafts?

Usually out-of-round ID, inconsistent wall, or worn chucks. Send us a sample core and your shaft type; the diagnosis is free.

Can NHPT match our current core spec?

Yes — send one core. We reverse-spec and quote an equivalent within 1 business day.