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Thread: Rubber off worn tyres?????
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18th September 2005, 11:26 PM #1
Rubber off worn tyres?????
Can any one tell me where the rubber that wears off tyres ends up? There should be a fair bit of it laying around??
JimSometimes in the daily challenges that life gives us, we miss what is really important...
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18th September 2005, 11:28 PM #2
Same place as all the dead skin that comes off human beings I guess :confused:
If at first you don't succeed, give something else a go. Life is far too short to waste time trying.
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18th September 2005, 11:37 PM #3
Into the soil mix on the roadside one would expect :confused:
Bruce C.
catchy catchphrase needed here, apply in writing to the above .
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18th September 2005, 11:41 PM #4
It dissapates into the air at the summernats!
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18th September 2005, 11:43 PM #5
Gets washed into our drains and then into the sea - just another reason why our fisheries are all stuffed (see, it's not all the fault of the netters).
Storm water really needs to be cleaned up on the way out, it's a huge pollutant ... but you didn't hear that from me. Here in Adelaide, we've had a lot of success with wetlands being used to filter the water. Should be more of it, but that'd be the govt spending money on something that actually does something rather than just sounding sexy (which is all commercial television cares about).
Richard
dammit, my greenie tendancies are showing again
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18th September 2005, 11:48 PM #6
Crikey wasn't I showing my "stix" heritage off, didn't even consider curb & gutter(city & town) type roads
Bruce C.
catchy catchphrase needed here, apply in writing to the above .
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19th September 2005, 12:00 AM #7
Rubber is biodegradable. It comes from latex from the sap of a tree & will eventually break down.
Cliff.
If you find a post of mine that is missing a pic that you'd like to see, let me know & I'll see if I can find a copy.
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19th September 2005, 12:37 AM #8
Jim,
the rubber that wears off tyres, as well as any oils and fuel that drips onto the road is trapped in the pores of the bitumen. Then, when you get the first bit of rain it all floats up and forms a slick coating on the bitumen. This is why there's always a swag of accidents the first time it rains after there's been a long dry spell. No doubt both you and Cliff have noticed that there's usually a few cars off the side of the range and off the roundabouts on the Cook highway after the first rains.
Mick"If you need a machine today and don't buy it,
tomorrow you will have paid for it and not have it."
- Henry Ford 1938
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19th September 2005, 09:53 AM #9
it all goes into another dimension, same place socks and workshop pencils go
Brett
Only Robinson Crusoe could get everything done by Friday!
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19th September 2005, 11:13 AM #10
I heard Dr. Karl talk about this exact subject last year on triple J, they (scientists) aren't sure where all the rubber goes, although it's believed that because the rubber particles are so small that they break down pretty quickly from the sunlight, similar to how plastic breaks down from UV rays I guess.
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19th September 2005, 11:29 AM #11Member
- Join Date
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Originally Posted by wombleMy advice is rarely any good, but is free to use at your own risk.
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19th September 2005, 11:35 AM #12
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19th September 2005, 12:02 PM #13
I've worked in a couple of warehouses that had unsealed concrete floors- very hard on fork tyres. If there's no breeze to blow it away, I can assure you it ends up on everything. You, um, scurvy dogs, you.
Regards,
Rusty.The perfect is the enemy of the good.
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19th September 2005, 12:12 PM #14
I've heard that said waste rubber is collected by a trained team of small Chinese labourers, brought into the country through some free-trade agreement. These rubber raiders operate throughout the country under the cover of darkness (so as not to alarm the honest tax-payer/voter), armed with cap-lamp and dustpan, placing the valuable but pirated resource into special pouches. It is then collected by a network of vans which transfer the booty to a central but undisclosed shipping terminal, and onwards to China. The rubber dust is then reprocessed and made into cheap, nasty v-belts, tubes and tyres, which of course us Aussies (as part of the free-trade agreement) buy back attached to machinery and vehicles etc. Much like our scrap metal trade really.
So now you know something Dr. Carl doesn'tAndy Mac
Change is inevitable, growth is optional.
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19th September 2005, 12:15 PM #15
They put it in KFC chicken nuggets.
"I don't practice what I preach because I'm not the kind of person I'm preaching to."
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