Uses of Natural Rubber

Uncured rubber can be used for lot of products including cements; for adhesive, insulating, and friction tapes; and for rubber utilized in insulating blankets and footwear. Vulcanized rubber has more applications. Resistance to abrasion makes softer sorts of rubber valuable for the treads of auto tires and conveyor belts, and makes vulcanite valuable for pump housings and piping utilized in the handling of abrasive sludge.

The flexibility of rubber is appealing in hoses, tires and rollers for devices starting from domestic clothes wringers to printing presses; its elasticity makes it suitable for various sorts of shock absorbers and for specialised machinery mountings designed to scale back vibration. Its relative gas impermeability makes it useful within the manufacture of articles like air hoses, balloons, balls and cushions. 

The resistance of rubber to water and to the action of most fluid chemicals has led to its use in rainwear, diving gear, and chemical and medicinal tubing and as a lining for storage tanks, processing equipment and railroad tank cars. due to their electric resistance , soft rubber goods are used as insulation and for protective gloves, shoes and blankets; vulcanite is employed for articles like telephone housings, parts for radio sets, meters and other electrical instruments. 

Rubber Mats
Cow Mats
Gym Mats
Rubber gym Mats
Stable Mats
Grass Mats
Grass Protection Mats
Safety Mats
Playground Safety Mats
Horse Mats
Horse Box Flooring
Industrial Rubber Flooring
Industrial Mats
Natural Rubber
Rubber Latex
Skim Crepes
RSS Ribbed Smoked Sheets

The coefficient of friction of rubber, which is high on dry surfaces and low on wet surfaces, results in its use for power-transmission belting and for water-lubricated bearings in deep-well pumps. Indian rubber balls or lacrosse balls are made from rubber.

Around 25 million tonnes of rubber are produced annually , of which 30 percent is natural. the rest is rubber derived from petrochemical sources. the highest end of latex production leads to latex products like surgeons’ gloves, balloons and other relatively high-value products. The mid-range which comes from the technically specified natural rubber materials finishes up largely in tires but also in conveyor belts, marine products, windshield wipers and miscellaneous goods. Natural rubber offers good elasticity, while synthetic materials tend to supply better resistance to environmental factors like oils, temperature, chemicals and ultraviolet . “Cured rubber” is rubber that has been compounded and subjected to the vulcanisation process to make cross-links within the rubber matrix.

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