The units were already installed in the field, commissioned and signed off.
In a mining environment, in heat, dust and vibration. Nothing unusual for this type of equipment. The spec had been followed. The label supplier had delivered exactly what was asked for. Adhesive rated correctly. Materials compliant.
On paper, everything was right. Three weeks later, the first report came in. A label had lifted – then another.
Then entire sections of identification started peeling away. Not all at once. Not dramatically. Just enough to create doubt.
Operators couldn’t read key information. Maintenance teams started second-guessing components. Photos were taken. Emails escalated.
The question came quickly and predictably: “Why is the adhesive failing?”
The team doubled down on the obvious answer. Stronger adhesive is required. Different specifications and more aggressive bonding?
Samples were rushed. Alternatives tested. Conversations shifted to suppliers, materials, and performance ratings.
But something didn’t add up as some labels were holding perfectly. Others, on the same machine, in the same environment, were failing. Same adhesive. Same material. Same spec.
Different outcome.
When the investigation widened beyond the adhesive, the pattern became clear.
It wasn’t one problem. It was a chain.
None of these issues, on their own, would have caused failure.
Together, they made it inevitable.
The adhesive didn’t fail. The system failed.
This is the turning point most teams reach, often later than they should. Labels are not just a product, they are part of a process.
And that process includes:
When any one of these is misunderstood, the label becomes the visible point of failure.
But it’s rarely the root cause.
There’s a reason teams default to blaming adhesive. It’s tangible. It’s specifiable. It feels controllable.
But in complex environments such as Mining, Defence, Medical, or Industrial manufacturing, performance isn’t driven by a single variable.
It’s driven by interaction.
When labels are treated as a standalone item, failure becomes a matter of when, not if.
The shift is subtle but critical.
From: “What adhesive do we need?”
To: “What does this label need to survive?”
That question changes everything as it brings in:
This is where most label decisions either succeed quietly… or fail expensively.
At LNI, the focus isn’t just on supplying labels. It’s about understanding the full operating context in which those labels need to perform.
Because when the system is right:
When a label fails, it’s often not just the adhesive.
It’s the moment a complex system reveals it wasn’t fully understood.
LNI designs and manufactures high-quality metal nameplates, labels and badges right here in Australia. If you have a product branding issue that needs to be solved, contact the specialists at LNI today.