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tapes

Tapes are thin, flexible strips of material often coated with an adhesive, magnetic coating, or printed scale, used in a wide range of tasks from binding and sealing to recording and measurement. They may be single-use or reusable, and some types are designed for temporary applications, while others are intended for long-term use or archival storage.

Adhesive tapes, also known as pressure-sensitive tapes, carry an adhesive on one or both sides. Common examples

Magnetic tapes consist of a flexible plastic substrate coated with magnetic material, used for audio, video,

Other tape types include film tapes used in motion picture and photography for splicing or masking, and

Care and storage: adhesives can degrade with heat, light, and solvents; store tapes in a cool, dry

include
masking
tape
(paper,
easily
peeled),
painter's
tape
(low
adhesion
for
clean
removal),
duct
tape
(cloth-backed
and
reinforced),
electrical
tape
(insulating
vinyl),
and
packaging
tape
(bonded
by
hot-melt
or
acrylic
adhesives
on
polypropylene
or
PET).
Double-sided
tapes
and
foam
tapes
provide
mounting
or
cushioning.
Filament
or
reinforced
tapes
use
fiberglass
or
Kevlar
for
extra
strength,
while
aluminum
foil
tape
is
used
for
sealing
HVAC
or
ducts.
and
data
recording.
Historically
used
in
reel-to-reel
and
cassette
formats,
later
digital
formats
such
as
DAT
and
VHS
HiFi.
Today,
broad
use
persists
in
professional
archival
storage
with
high-capacity
systems
such
as
Linear
Tape-Open
(LTO),
valued
for
durability
and
long-term
data
retention.
Access
requires
appropriate
playback
hardware.
tape
measures,
which
are
a
different
category:
retractable
strips
of
metal
or
fiberglass
with
measurement
markings
used
for
length
measurement
in
construction
and
fabrication.
place
away
from
direct
sunlight.