Distinct lower-edge construction
Rope-Wrapped Lead Three-Layer Sinking Net
Use this page when the lower edge shows repeated lead elements enclosed or wrapped by rope construction. The product is described as rope-wrapped lead because the supplied photographs do not justify calling it continuous lead-core rope or rubber-coated lead.

Identify the lower edge correctly
Rope-wrapped lead
Visible repeated weighted sections are integrated with a rope arrangement. Quote by unit dimensions or weight, spacing, rope size and mass per known finished length.
Continuous lead-core rope
A continuous internal lead line is a different construction. Do not select it from this page unless the buyer’s sample and technical details verify that structure.
Separate lead sinkers
Individual sinkers mounted at intervals may belong on the ordinary three-layer sinking page. A lower-edge close-up resolves the difference.
Data needed beyond the lead rope
| Panel set | Inner mesh and line plus outer mesh and line, each measured independently. |
|---|---|
| Finished dimensions | Mounted length and height; 50m/100m and 0.8m–6m are reference ranges only. |
| Lower-edge mass | Weight per element and interval, or total weight per known finished length. |
| Rope construction | Diameter, color reference, wrap pattern and attachment photograph. |
| Upper edge | Rope and any float arrangement needed to complete the finished balance. |
| Packing | Fold or bundle method, pieces per bale/carton, labels and shipping marks. |
Why the mass basis matters
Two lower edges can look similar in a small photograph but differ in lead quantity, element length or interval. Those differences affect product weight, packing and freight as well as the net’s supplied balance. A quote therefore uses measured mass and spacing rather than a color name.
Order review sequence
- Approve a clear lower-edge reference and the terminology used in the quote.
- Confirm inner/outer panels and the finished size.
- Confirm the mass basis, rope and upper edge.
- Approve quantity, packing and destination.
- Review agreed measurement and packing photos before shipment where included in the order.
Plan weight-sensitive packing and freight
The lead arrangement can materially change gross weight, so the RFQ should not wait until shipment to define it. Ask for estimated net weight only after unit mass, interval, finished length, ropes and panel set are fixed. State whether the buyer needs a maximum bale weight for manual handling, carton protection around the lower edge, or destination-specific labeling for lead-containing goods.
For container or consolidated cargo planning, keep product net weight, packing weight and total shipment weight as separate values. A supplier quotation can provide an order estimate, while the final packing record confirms the shipped count. These are logistics controls, not claims about the fishing performance of a heavier net.
Repeat-order evidence
Retain a close-up showing one complete wrapped section beside a ruler and scale, plus a wider image showing its interval along the rope. A repeat description such as “same green rope” is not enough because shade and wrap appearance can vary while the mass basis changes.
Request a rope-wrapped lead quote