
Choosing a red pigment grade for production isn’t only about shade. For most industrial teams, the real risk sits in qualification time, batch consistency, migration/bleed behavior, and whether the supplier can support audits with the right documentation.
This guide lays out a procurement-ready framework for evaluating C.I. Pigment Red 170 (PR170) for coatings, plastics & masterbatch, and printing/packaging inks—with a clear checklist you can use to qualify a specific grade such as Pigment Red 170F5RK / HP Red 2131.
Before you compare performance, lock down “what exactly are we buying?” This prevents avoidable re-qualification later.
Confirm these items up front:
Color Index (CI) name: C.I. Pigment Red 170 (PR170).
CAS number: confirm via the supplier’s SDS/TDS (don’t rely on email descriptions or informal spec sheets).
Regulatory documentation set: at minimum, SDS e TDS for the exact grade you’re qualifying.
COA expectations: define what must appear on each batch Certificate of Analysis (COA) (test items, methods, limits, and traceability).
⚠️ Warning: If a supplier can’t provide an SDS/TDS/COA package for the exact grade name you’re ordering, treat that as a qualification risk—especially when you operate change-control or approved vendor lists.
PR170 can be used across multiple applications, but qualification criteria shift depending on resin system, processing temperature, and exposure conditions. Define your “done means done” requirements in your internal test plan.
For coatings, teams typically qualify PR170 around three themes: appearance, durability, and process robustness.
Focus areas to include in your evaluation:
Tinting strength / color development: confirm the shade target and strength relative to your internal standard.
Dispersion behavior: evaluate how quickly you reach a stable grind and whether viscosity rises unexpectedly.
Lightfastness and weathering: align the test condition to your end use (interior vs exterior; UV exposure expectations).
Solvent and chemical resistance: check resistance against the solvents/chemicals your coating actually sees.
Heat stability: confirm the pigment holds shade and strength through your bake/process window.
For plastics, PR170 qualification often fails (or passes) on processing heat, migration/bleed, and batch-to-batch stability.
Focus areas to include in your evaluation:
Heat resistance during processing: confirm the pigment tolerates your real melt temperature and residence time.
Migration / bleed resistance: test against the substrates and additives you actually use (plasticizers, slip agents, contact layers).
Dispersion in your carrier: check whether you need special dispersants or higher energy input to hit your QC targets.
Color consistency: confirm that batch variation stays inside your ΔE tolerance and does not force frequent formulation correction.
Printing inks add another layer: rheology, solvent exposure, and rub/transfer performance.
Focus areas to include in your evaluation:
Dispersion and viscosity stability: confirm stable ink viscosity and no unexpected thickening over time.
Solvent resistance: verify resistance relative to your solvent system and end-use contact scenario.
Lightfastness and weathering: define exposure expectations (e.g., outdoor labels vs indoor packaging).
Low migration / bleed: especially important when inks contact overprint varnishes, laminations, or sensitive substrates.
A clean qualification process reduces risk and keeps procurement and technical teams aligned.
Ask for samples that represent the grade you plan to buy (same treatment, same particle characteristics), plus the documentation set.
Minimum request package:
A sample of the grade
TDS (Technical Data Sheet)
SDS (Safety Data Sheet)
A COA example (what you will receive with each batch)
Don’t test “everything.” Test the things that cause scrap, rework, customer complaints, or regulatory friction.
A practical test approach:
Define your internal pass/fail criteria (shade, strength, dispersion time, migration/bleed behavior, durability)
Use your own resin system, processing window, and substrate
Document your procedure so results are reproducible and auditable
Many pigments look fine in lab drawdowns but drift at scale.
In pilot runs, watch for:
Shade shift after full thermal history
Dispersion variability run-to-run
Processing stability (filterability, viscosity, foaming issues where relevant)
If you work with approved vendor lists, build these items into supplier approval:
COA requirements (tests included, frequency, traceability)
Definition of “material change” (raw materials, process, site, treatment)
Notification expectations and re-qualification triggers
These issues commonly cause late-stage delays:
No clear documentation trail: SDS/TDS/COA missing, inconsistent, or not grade-specific.
Unclear batch traceability: COA cannot be tied to lot numbers and shipment documents.
Vague fastness claims: performance statements without context (test condition, method, or internal standard).
Unmanaged variation: frequent shade/strength drift that forces ongoing correction in production.
Logistics uncertainty: unclear packaging, inconsistent lead times, or weak communication during shipping disruptions.
Pro Tip: Treat “data turnaround time” as a supplier KPI. Slow response on COA clarifications or test questions is usually a preview of slow response during a real quality event.
For decision-stage evaluation, buyers usually need more than a brochure. Ask for a package that helps you qualify and re-order reliably.
Documentation
TDS: key properties and recommended applications for the exact grade
SDS: safety and handling information
COA: batch-specific results and traceability
Quality & supply information
Batch identification and traceability approach
Packaging options and storage recommendations
Typical lead time and shipping terms
Support process for technical questions during trials
If you’re evaluating Pigment Red 170F5RK / HP Red 2131, you can start the conversation with Pigmentos de honra and request the sample + document set above.
If you’re preparing to qualify PR170 for coatings, plastics/masterbatch, or printing inks, the fastest way to reduce risk is to evaluate the grade with the right documents and a test plan that matches your real process.
Request:
PR170 sample (HP Red 2131)
TDS + SDS
COA example + batch traceability details
Pricing, MOQ, and lead time
Start at the Honor Pigments website to coordinate samples and technical documentation.
PR170 is the Color Index category, while a grade name like “170F5RK” typically reflects a specific manufacturer’s treatment and performance balance. Always qualify the exact grade using its SDS/TDS and your application test plan.
A drawdown is a good start, but most production issues show up during thermal history, scale-up dispersion, and migration/bleed checks under real substrate and additive conditions.
For most procurement workflows: SDS, TDS, and COA for the exact grade, plus clarity on lot traceability and material-change notification expectations.