Extruded vs Sprayed Thermoplastic Application: Build, Cost, Durability
Extruded and sprayed are the two hot-applied thermoplastic application methods. Extruded uses a ribbon shoe behind a ride-on melter to lay 90-125 mil of resin onto the pavement at controlled thickness. Sprayed uses a heated spray gun to atomize 60-90 mil of resin through a fan pattern. Extruded delivers 30-45 percent longer lifespan at higher per-linear-foot cost; sprayed completes 50-70 percent more linear feet per crew-hour at lower cost but lower durability. Both meet AASHTO M249 when sourced from a qualified manufacturer, but state DOT spec for highway lane lines requires extruded.
When a property manager reads a thermoplastic quote, the line items typically separate "extruded" and "sprayed" with different per-linear-foot prices. The lower number on sprayed looks like the better deal until you run TCO. Below we break down the build, equipment, lifespan, and cost differences so the buyer can match application method to job profile.
How does extruded thermoplastic application work?
A ride-on or walk-behind extrusion melter heats AASHTO M249 thermoplastic resin to 410-430 degrees F in a 200-1,000 lb capacity vat. The molten resin flows through a heated hose to an extrusion shoe at the rear of the machine. As the operator drives or walks the line, the shoe contacts the pavement and lays a precise ribbon of resin behind it. The shoe controls width (4-inch, 6-inch, 8-inch standard) and thickness (90-125 mil typical) with mechanical precision.
A bead-drop applicator follows the shoe by 6-12 inches, dropping AASHTO M247 Type I glass beads at 8-12 lb per 100 square feet onto the still-molten resin. The beads embed about 60 percent into the surface for retroreflectivity that lasts the life of the marking.
What does the equipment cost?
A new Crown ProMelt 4000 ride-on extruder runs $85,000-$120,000. A walk-behind Graco LineLazer Thermolazer with a 4-inch shoe runs $32,000-$48,000. Cojo crews run both formats depending on job size.
How does sprayed thermoplastic application work?
A sprayed application uses a smaller melter (often the same machine, different attachment) that pumps molten resin to a heated spray gun. The gun atomizes the resin through a heated fan tip, much like a paint spray gun, and lays the marking at 60-90 mil thickness across a wider stripe footprint. Glass beads are dropped immediately behind the gun pass at 6-10 lb per 100 square feet.
The trade-off is build consistency. Spray atomization cannot match the mechanical precision of an extrusion shoe, so the resulting film thickness varies by 15-25 percent across the stripe width. Edges are softer than extruded ribbon edges. Bead retention is comparable but slightly lower because the thinner film exposes intermixed beads sooner.
Where does sprayed application win?
- Speed -- 1,500-2,400 linear feet per crew-hour vs 800-1,400 for extruded
- Diagonal and angled work -- spray fan covers diagonals that an extrusion shoe cannot follow
- Mobilization-light jobs -- a walk-behind sprayer fits in a pickup; a ride-on extruder needs a trailer
- Touch-up work -- spraying a 200-foot edge line is much faster setup than positioning a ride-on extruder
Side-by-side spec comparison
| Spec | Extruded | Sprayed |
|---|---|---|
| Typical build | 90-125 mil | 60-90 mil |
| Build consistency | +/- 5 mil across stripe width | +/- 15 mil across stripe width |
| Crew-hour speed | 800 to 1,400 LF | 1,500 to 2,400 LF |
| Glass-bead drop rate | 8 to 12 lb per 100 sq-ft | 6 to 10 lb per 100 sq-ft |
| Lifespan at 5,000 ADT | 6 to 8 years | 4 to 6 years |
| Equipment | Ride-on or walk-behind extruder + bead applicator | Walk-behind or hand spray gun + bead applicator |
| AASHTO M249 compliance | Yes | Yes |
| Oregon DOT QPL highway lane line | Approved | Not approved |
| Industry baseline range cost installed | $1.80 to $3.50 per LF | $1.20 to $2.40 per LF |
Current Market Reality
2026 thermoplastic resin pricing reflects an 18-22 percent lift over 2024 because hydrocarbon resin tracks crude oil and the Asian glass-bead supply chain added 9 percent freight surcharge in 2025. The per-linear-foot delta between extruded and sprayed compressed slightly because spray-application labor cost rose faster than extrusion-shoe labor cost (more skilled operators required for spray consistency). Cojo Q1 2026 supplier quotes show $1.95-$3.10 per LF installed for extruded white 4-inch and $1.35-$2.20 for sprayed equivalent on Oregon parking lots.
How does lifespan compare on real Oregon installs?
A 35,000-square-foot Eugene retail center striped in May 2024 used both formats:
- 1,800 LF of extruded 4-inch white at 125 mil for primary stalls
- 240 LF of sprayed 4-inch yellow at 80 mil for ADA aisle hatching diagonals
At the 24-month inspection, the extruded white was rated "no maintenance" with full retroreflectivity passing. The sprayed yellow showed early wear on the highest-traffic diagonal (where carts cross daily) and was rated "expect restripe at month 36." That gap of 12-18 months on the same lot reflects the build-thickness difference, not the sprayed quality. Sprayed at 80 mil simply has less material to wear through.
When does sprayed make business sense?
Sprayed wins the math on:
- Short jobs under 800 linear feet where extruder mobilization eats the schedule
- Diagonal or angled work that an extrusion shoe physically cannot follow
- Lower-traffic lots under 2,500 ADT where the 4-6 year lifespan still beats traffic paint repaint cycle
- Annual repaint contracts where the lower cost per LF is the priority and TCO over 8 years is not the controlling factor
When does extruded make business sense?
Extruded wins on:
- Long linear runs where the shoe-extrusion speed amortizes the mobilization cost
- High-traffic surfaces above 5,000 ADT where the extra 35 mil of build is the critical durability driver
- State DOT spec work that mandates 125 mil minimum
- HSIP and SRTS federally funded projects that require AASHTO M249 plus 125 mil build
For more detail on the build threshold itself, see our thermoplastic mil thickness spec 90 vs 125 writeup.
Can both formats run on the same job?
Yes, and most large jobs combine them. The Cojo crew on the 35,000-square-foot Eugene job above ran the ride-on extruder for primary stalls in the morning, then swapped to walk-behind spray for the ADA diagonals and odd-angle gore work in the afternoon. The same melter and bead applicator can switch between methods with a 20-minute equipment change. The full project context is in our service-side thermoplastic striping Oregon writeup.
How should a quote line-item the application method?
A reputable thermoplastic contractor will quote:
- Extruded line work: $X per linear foot, by stripe width
- Sprayed line work: $Y per linear foot, by stripe width
- Mobilization (one-time) for ride-on equipment if applicable
- Glass-bead drop-on per 100 square feet
If the quote is "thermoplastic striping" with no method specified, push back. The two methods are different products with different lifespans and the buyer needs to see the line items separately to make the call.
Get an Application-Method Quote for Your Lot
Cojo's Salem and Eugene crews run ride-on extruders and walk-behind sprayers on every thermoplastic job and will mix methods on the same project to optimize cost and durability. Contact Cojo for an extruded vs sprayed line-item quote on your lot. For Eugene-area service availability, see our thermoplastic installation Eugene Oregon page.