What uses do you have for old rubber tracks?

kvc

Member

Equipment
MX 5200
Jun 26, 2020
54
15
8
Pemberton Australia
Hi all. it's been a while since my last post. Been busy as... Anyhow, thought I would ask the members what they do with old rubber tracks off a mini excavator? I recently replaced the tracks on mine and because there's no local means to recycle them (and a hefty fee to dispose of them in landfill) I thought there must be a good use for them. I've googled this and only seen a few suggestions, such as raised garden beds, cutting sections for stair treads, or in a horse float. They're not easy to cut or cheap to buy and apart from some modest wear, the old ones are in pretty good shape (no sharp edges or wire hanging out). Interested to hear about any practical uses members have found for these.
 

kvc

Member

Equipment
MX 5200
Jun 26, 2020
54
15
8
Pemberton Australia
Keep for spares....just in case?
Unfortunately, they're beyond that - stretched and metal lugs destroying wear-plates. Surprisingly, I only managed to find one distributor offering a warranty on a new set beyond 12 months (24). The average lifespan seems to be around 2 years or 300 - 400 hours max.
 

Nicfin36

Well-known member

Equipment
L2501 HST, BH77 Backhoe, SSQA Loader ZD1011 Mower
Jun 19, 2019
1,014
457
83
Decatur, AL
Wow, that is not as long as I would have thought. (I don't own a mini excavator.)
 

ccoon520

Active member

Equipment
L2501 w/ FEL
Apr 15, 2019
360
106
43
IA
Can you post a picture of them? I'm thinking maybe you could make a storage pad for buckets or other implements? Knock out enough pins to separate them into quarter sections and them lay them side by side. Probably easier than trying to cut them apart.
 

kvc

Member

Equipment
MX 5200
Jun 26, 2020
54
15
8
Pemberton Australia
Can you post a picture of them? I'm thinking maybe you could make a storage pad for buckets or other implements? Knock out enough pins to separate them into quarter sections and them lay them side by side. Probably easier than trying to cut them apart.
They're not held together by pins - they are a one-piece moulded rubber track with steel belts (like a tyre) and have steel pins/cleats moulded within the rubber. They can be cut, but it makes a real cloud of burning rubber and requires a suitable tool (like a diamond saw blade).
I'm going to put this in the 'too hard' basket for now, until I research this more. in the meantime, they'll get used to make a raised garden bed until a better idea is presented. Thanks for your suggestion.
 

mcfarmall

Well-known member

Equipment
Kubota M5660SUHD, Farmall C
Sep 11, 2013
1,382
1,649
113
Kalamazoo, MI
Lay one in a circle, pound some lengths of rebar with a hook on the end to hold it to the ground, fill with sand for a cool sandbox for the kids...maybe a local day care or elementary school could use them.
 

mikester

Well-known member

Equipment
M59 TLB
Oct 21, 2017
3,147
1,626
113
Canada
www.divergentstuff.ca
Lay one in a circle, pound some lengths of rebar with a hook on the end to hold it to the ground, fill with sand for a cool sandbox for the kids...maybe a local day care or elementary school could use them.
Which way do you point the protruding steel wires and/or fibreglass fibres?
 

motionclone

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
L345DT with Lp mower, forks and grapple thumb, Bobcat 337 Midi Ex
May 4, 2018
1,398
992
113
Maine
Hi all. it's been a while since my last post. Been busy as... Anyhow, thought I would ask the members what they do with old rubber tracks off a mini excavator? I recently replaced the tracks on mine and because there's no local means to recycle them (and a hefty fee to dispose of them in landfill) I thought there must be a good use for them. I've googled this and only seen a few suggestions, such as raised garden beds, cutting sections for stair treads, or in a horse float. They're not easy to cut or cheap to buy and apart from some modest wear, the old ones are in pretty good shape (no sharp edges or wire hanging out). Interested to hear about any practical uses members have found for these.
Outside of the box:
Cut them up into 1 foot sections, autograph them then put them up on ebay for $100 each. Do something epic with your excavator and put up a video of it so that it goes viral and you have name recognition first though.
 
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kvc

Member

Equipment
MX 5200
Jun 26, 2020
54
15
8
Pemberton Australia
Thanks everyone for your suggestions. I especially liked the kids' sandpit idea - somehow I don't think today's generation of bubble-wrapped children would be permitted to go anywhere near something as 'dangerous' as a ring of rubber, supported by pieces of steel, with sand within....
The tracks will be used as raised garden beds on our farm!
 

Crash277

Well-known member

Equipment
BX23S
Jan 17, 2021
846
622
93
Canada
I’d put them on the cement floor in my garage in front of the work benches. Keeps you elevated off the cold floor in the winter.
 
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kvc

Member

Equipment
MX 5200
Jun 26, 2020
54
15
8
Pemberton Australia
I’d put them on the cement floor in my garage in front of the work benches. Keeps you elevated off the cold floor in the winter.
Unfortunately, the cleats inside don't allow the tracks to sit flat. I use old conveyor belt for standing on inside my workshop - works a treat!
 

Crash277

Well-known member

Equipment
BX23S
Jan 17, 2021
846
622
93
Canada
Unfortunately, the cleats inside don't allow the tracks to sit flat. I use old conveyor belt for standing on inside my workshop - works a treat!
That’s a good idea. I have a piece of rubber matting left over from a new build horse barn. That stuff is heavy duty.
 

Stewco422

New member
Feb 26, 2022
1
0
1
Greenville SC
I work for a dealership. We donated some larger ones to a horse rescue to hold round bales of hay. Free for them. Safer for older horses vs metal rings. The farm went from over 4 bales per week to only 2.