I did a little more digging around the Internet and came up
with the following figures:
1 tire = 10 to 12 pounds of scrap rubber
Instead of scrap rubber, 1 tire can also produce 1 gallon (3.8 liters) of diesel fuel.
Therefore, a large system that processes an average of 500 tires per hour can produce 5,000 to 6,000 pounds of scrap rubber per hour.
According to State Of Arizona specifications, it takes 1,500 pounds of crumb rubber added to asphalt to produce one lane mile of 2-inch thick paved road.
Arizona also says that two inches of rubberized asphalt costs the same as four inches of standard asphalt, but lasts twice as long. Crumb rubber can also be added to road patch mix.
It takes 210,000 to 300,000 pounds of crumb rubber to provide the base for
a gridiron football or soccer field.
with the following figures:
1 tire = 10 to 12 pounds of scrap rubber
Instead of scrap rubber, 1 tire can also produce 1 gallon (3.8 liters) of diesel fuel.
Therefore, a large system that processes an average of 500 tires per hour can produce 5,000 to 6,000 pounds of scrap rubber per hour.
According to State Of Arizona specifications, it takes 1,500 pounds of crumb rubber added to asphalt to produce one lane mile of 2-inch thick paved road.
Arizona also says that two inches of rubberized asphalt costs the same as four inches of standard asphalt, but lasts twice as long. Crumb rubber can also be added to road patch mix.
It takes 210,000 to 300,000 pounds of crumb rubber to provide the base for
a gridiron football or soccer field.
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