Baled tire product

4057141
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Inventors

Laurie, Albert F.
Bunch, G. W.

Application #

574595

Filed

May-5-1975

Published

Nov-8-1977

Current US Class

052/DIG7
100/12
114/219
206/304
206/83.5
405/107
428/903.3

International Classes

B65D 085/06; B65D 071/02

Field of Search

61/5 61/37 206/304 206/386 206/497 206/499 206/597 206/83.5 114/219 100/98 100/12

Examiners

Price; William

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Klarquist, Sparkman, Campbell, Leigh, Hall & Whinston

US Patent References

3951384   Impact absorbing...
4006678   Machine for compr...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
Discarded rubber automotive tires are processed into bales for disposal and use as landfill, fish habitats and other purposes by compressing a stack of such tires endwise into a compact annular bale and then securing the bale with ties at circumferentially spaced locations thereon. Preferably during compression of the stack, it is slit lengthwise from end to end at multiple circumferential locations between the wires. The resulting slits extend inwardly from the outer toward the inner periphery of the bale but terminate short of the inner tire bead and rim to permit the escape of air and water from the annular interior spaces of the tires and yet maintain the integrity of the bale. The compressed, tied and slit baled product is particularly useful in forming artifical reefs in bodies of water for use as fish habitats because of its lack of buoyancy and resulting ease and accuracy of placement. By tying the bale with one non-corrodible tie and cutting the others or permitting such others to corrode apart when in place, the baled tires fan out to form a particularly effective fish habitat.
 
Claims
We claim:

1. A baled tire product comprising a stack of rubber tires having the axes of their center openings in approximate alignment,

said stack being compressed in a direction along said axes into a short annular bale so as to maintain the alignment of said center openings,

said bale being maintained in its compressed condition by a series of baling ties encircling the annulus of said bale at circumferentially spaced-apart positions thereon,

said bale having a series of openings spaced between said ties, each said opening extending generally radially inwardly from the outer circumferential periphery of said annulus from top to bottom thereof and terminating short of said central openings so as to expose the interior annular space within each said tire to ambient air and yet maintain the integrity of said bale.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to the disposal of discarded rubber automotive tires and more particularly to a method of processing such tires for disposal and to the resulting product which is especially useful as an artifical fish reef.

2. Description of the Prior Art

Rubber automotive tires are a major disposal problem in the United States and most other developed countries of the world. It is estimated that nearly 200 million old tires are discarded yearly in the United States alone. Commonly such tires are discarded at organized trash dumps. However, many dumps do not willingly accept tires because of the large space they occupy and because there they remain a disposal problem. Many other used tires are simply discarded by unthinking persons in lakes, streams, and in the open countryside where they remain an unsightly blight indefinitely.

Other means of disposal include burning, but the dense smoke produced by the burning tires creates an air pollution problem.
 
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