In the design and manufacture of baby strollers, every detail that comes into direct contact with the infant carries parents’ utmost concern for safety and health. For a long time, nylon or polyester woven webbing used for safety harnesses, bumper bar padding, or carrycot handles has been widely adopted due to its controllable cost and ease of processing. However, in real parenting scenarios, its inherent flaws have become increasingly apparent. When babies curiously explore the world from their strollers, their first instinct is often to mouth the webbing within reach—the fiber gaps of traditional woven straps easily trap drool, milk stains, and food residues, becoming a breeding ground for bacteria. Routine wiping cannot clean them thoroughly, while frequent washing accelerates material degradation. Furthermore, some low-cost webbing may retain chemical additives from the manufacturing process, emitting a faint yet disquieting odor. These hidden risks are driving the children’s product industry to seek more reassuring solutions.
Based on deep insight into infant usage scenarios, coated webbing made from silicone or TPU materials is becoming an ideal replacement for traditional woven straps, owing to its comprehensive performance advantages. Its core innovation lies in forming a dense, smooth, and seamlessly coated layer of eco-friendly rubber over a strong polyester base tape through high-temperature extrusion or vulcanization processes. This “protective coat” fundamentally prevents stains from penetrating the inner fibers—whether it’s spilled juice, sticky cereal, or outdoor dust, a simple wipe with a damp cloth restores cleanliness, making daily maintenance of the stroller simple and efficient. In terms of safety, food-contact grade silicone and rigorously certified TPU materials ensure the substance itself is non-toxic and odor-free, free from harmful substances such as phthalates and heavy metals. Even if frequently mouthed by babies, it poses no risk, providing parents with crucial peace of mind.