Adhesion Rubber
Adhesion Rubber
A critical component for creating strong, durable splices and repairs. This uncured bonding rubber chemically fuses with belt carcass and repair materials to form a single, homogeneous unit.
A critical component for creating strong, durable splices and repairs. This uncured bonding rubber chemically fuses with belt carcass and repair materials to form a single, homogeneous unit.
Type: Specially formulated bonding rubber (uncured).
Primary Use: Splicing and repair of conveyor belts.
Function: Ensures strong bonding between belt layers, repair patches, and rubber components.
Key Properties: Excellent tackiness and controlled curing properties.
Benefit: Creates high-strength, reliable splices for overall belt reliability.
Adhesion Rubber Catalogue
A critical component for creating strong, durable splices and repairs. This uncured bonding rubber chemically fuses with belt carcass and repair materials to form a single, homogeneous unit.
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Frequently Asked Questions
The primary factors are tension, distance, and load. Use Textile Belts (fabric ply) for general-purpose, cost-effective conveying with moderate tension, typical distances, and standard loads. Choose Steel Cord Belts for long-distance, high-tension, and heavy-load applications (like major mining or overland systems) where minimal stretch and maximum strength are critical. Our technical team can perform a full conveyor calculation to specify the correct belt.
Exposure consistency. For Oil Resistant belts, consider whether the oil/grease exposure is constant or incidental. For Heat Resistant belts, the key is the maximum continuous material temperature, not just ambient air temperature. Exceeding the belt’s designed temperature rating is the leading cause of premature cover cracking and failure. Always provide us with your specific material temperature details.
Yes, with proper selection. Chevron belts are designed with a smooth base on the bottom and between cleats, allowing them to run on standard flat idlers and trough. They can navigate horizontal curves if the conveyor system is designed for it. It is critical to select the correct cleat height and profile for your incline angle and material size to ensure smooth running over transitions.
Repair Patches (cold bonding) are ideal for localized damage like rips, gouges, or holes, allowing for rapid, on-site repair to minimize downtime. A full vulcanized splice (hot or cold) is required when joining the ends of a belt during installation or after cutting out a damaged section. Patches restore cover integrity; splices restore carcass (tensile) strength. For large or structurally compromised damage, a professional splice is always recommended.
There’s no fixed interval; it depends on operating hours, load, and environmental conditions. Inspect lagging during routine maintenance. Key signs for replacement include:
Visible wear down to the pulley metal.
Glazing or hardening of the rubber surface, reducing friction.
Chunks missing or cracks.
Persistent belt slippage that adjustment cannot fix.
Proactive replacement of worn lagging is far more cost-effective than the damage caused by slippage.
Adhesion Rubber (uncured gum rubber) is the critical bonding matrix that recreates the original belt’s monolithic structure. It is placed between belt plies and, when cured, fuses with them to transmit the tensile load. Standard rubber cement alone is insufficient for structural splices. The correct process uses a cold vulcanizing liquid adhesive to prepare surfaces, followed by the application of the specific Adhesion Rubber compound, which is then cured under pressure. Using the wrong materials will result in a weak, failed splice.
