The Problem with Single-Material Profiles
For decades, commercial bus body builders worked with a straightforward but limiting toolkit: rigid PVC profiles for structure, and separate rubber seals for weatherproofing. Installing these as two separate components was time-consuming, created assembly variation, and introduced failure points at every joint between the rigid body and the compliant seal.
The failure modes were predictable. Rigid profiles would crack under vibration. Adhesive-bonded rubber would delaminate under thermal cycling. Water ingress at the interface between the two materials would cause accelerating degradation. And the aesthetic result — visible seam lines, inconsistent profiles — was increasingly unacceptable to fleet operators and end customers alike.
Co-extrusion solved all of these problems simultaneously. By bonding rigid and flexible materials in a single extrusion pass, co-extruded profiles eliminate the interface between structure and seal — because there is no interface. They are one continuous, permanently bonded component.
What Co-Extrusion Actually Is
Co-extrusion is a manufacturing process in which two or more materials are simultaneously extruded through a single die, fusing at the molecular level while still in a molten state. For sealing applications, this typically means a rigid PVC or nylon structural carrier bonded to an EPDM or TPE rubber sealing element.
The key technical advantage is the bond: unlike adhesive lamination (which can delaminate under heat and vibration) or mechanical retention (which creates stress concentrations), co-extruded bonds are permanent and uniform along the entire length of the profile. There is no weak point, no joint, no adhesive layer to fail.
Technical Note: Co-extruded profiles for bus body applications typically use 60–80 Shore A EPDM rubber bonded to rigid PVC carriers, operating across temperature ranges of -30°C to +85°C — covering the full spectrum of Indian operating environments from Himalayan routes to coastal heat.
Where Bus Body Builders Are Using Co-Extrusion Today
The adoption of co-extrusion in the bus body segment has accelerated significantly over the past five years, driven by the combination of improved material science, increasingly capable extrusion tooling, and rising quality standards from fleet operators and state transport undertakings (STUs).
Door Perimeter Seals
The highest-stress sealing application in any bus — co-extrusion delivers consistent compression across the full door perimeter.
Window Frame Surrounds
Rigid PVC window frame with integrated rubber glazing bead — fitted in one operation instead of two.
Roof Rail Systems
Structural roof rail profile with co-extruded rubber weatherstrip — eliminating a second assembly operation.
Floor Edge Channels
Anti-vibration floor mounting channel with integrated soft sealing lip for floor panel retention.
The Commercial Case: Co-Extrusion vs. Traditional Two-Part Systems
Beyond the technical advantages, the commercial case for co-extrusion in bus body production is compelling. Consider the full-cost comparison between a traditional two-part door seal system (rigid PVC frame + separately bonded EPDM gasket) versus a co-extruded profile performing both functions:
| Factor | Traditional Two-Part | Co-Extrusion Profile |
|---|---|---|
| Components per door | 2 (frame + seal) | 1 |
| Assembly operations | 2 (fit + bond) | 1 (fit) |
| Delamination risk | Present (adhesive bond) | None (co-extruded bond) |
| Water ingress points | Multiple (joints) | Minimal |
| Long-term maintenance | Higher (seal replacement) | Lower (integrated system) |
| Aesthetic consistency | Variable | Consistent |
What Procurement Teams Need to Know
If you're specifying sealing profiles for a bus body build programme and you haven't yet evaluated co-extrusion, now is the time. The key questions to ask your profile supplier are:
1. Do you have in-house co-extrusion tooling capability? Not all profile manufacturers have invested in co-extrusion equipment. If your supplier is bonding components post-extrusion and presenting them as co-extruded, you are not getting a co-extruded product — and you are not getting the bonding permanence that makes co-extrusion valuable.
2. What material combinations can you run? The most capable suppliers can run PVC/EPDM, PVC/TPE, nylon/EPDM, and foam-core co-extrusions. If your supplier can only run one combination, your design options are limited.
3. Can you develop custom profiles from drawings? Bus body profiles are rarely standard. You need a supplier with in-house tooling design capability who can develop a new die to your cross-section specification and validate it through a full dimensional approval process.
The SMI Perspective
At Shine Masters Industries, we've been producing co-extruded profiles for the commercial vehicle segment for many years. We see the shift clearly in the enquiries we receive — five years ago, most bus body builders were asking for separate rubber and PVC profiles. Today, the majority are asking for co-extruded solutions, and those who aren't yet are asking because a competitor has switched and they want to understand why.
The transition is happening because co-extrusion delivers better performance, lower total system cost, and a better finished product — and because the material technology and tooling capability have matured to the point where it is now accessible across the full range of bus body applications, not just premium specifications.
If you're evaluating co-extruded profiles for your next bus body programme, our team is ready to work from your existing drawings or samples to develop the right solution.