SOPREMA

Search

COLPHENE® SANDED SKU: 01217

COLPHENE® SANDED SKU: 01217

COLPHENE SANDED is a SBS-modified bitumen membrane approved for use in multi-ply membrane waterproofing assemblies. COLPHENE SANDED is reinforced with a glass fiber mat that is saturated and coated on both sides with a proprietary formulation of elastomeric styrene-butadiene-styrene (SBS) polymer modified bitumen.

Product Properties

  • ASTM D6163, Type I, Grade S
  • Installation Method Cold Adhered
  • Reinforcement Glass Fiber
  • Thickness 87 mils (2.2 mm)
  • Topside Sanded
  • Underside Sanded

Installation

Prior to installation, unroll COLPHENE SANDED onto the deck and allow to relax. Place COLPHENE SANDED in desired position and back roll the product. Apply approved cold adhesive following the manufacturer’s guidelines. COLPHENE SANDED is then placed into the cold adhesive and rolled with a weighted roller to ensure adhesion.

 

Testing & Approvals

Related Products

ELASTOPHENE® FLAM LS FR GR

ELASTOPHENE® Flam LS FR GR (low slope, fire retardant, granulated) is an SBS-modified bitumen cap ply for use in approved…

View Product

COLPHENE® STICK

COLPHENE® Stick SBS-modified bitumen, self-adhered base ply reinforced with a tough, dimensionally stable nonwoven polyester mat. A fine mineral aggregate on the topside facilitates self-adhered and cold-adhesive applications.

View Product

SENTINEL® MOLDED UNIVERSAL CORNERS

SENTINEL MOLDED UNIVERSAL CORNERS are injection molded, unreinforced flashings that are used to flash a variety of irregular details or…

View Product

Related Projects

Columbia University Medical Center – New York, New York

When adding a new building to the Columbia University Medical Center campus, a top priority was that all products were available for a single source manufacturer that offered one warranty for the entire project. That is where SOPREMA came in.

American Airlines Center – Dallas, Texas

On March 21, 2022, a leaky roof on Dallas' American Airlines Center delayed the start of an NBA game between the hometown Mavericks and the Minnesota Timberwolves, and after the issue surfaced again a couple months later to interfere with a Mavs playoff game, quick action was needed to replace the building's 20-year-old roof.