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Rolla Goodman

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RUBBER STABLE MATS ROLLS

started by Rolla Goodman on 18 May 12
  • Rolla Goodman
     
    The most common type of stable mats is definite. However, many stable owners are covering their tangible floors with rubber mat, which offers a number of advantages:

    Yielding. A concrete floor is very hard and can cause various kinds of injuries. For example, when getting up from a prone position, a horse can scrape skin off with concrete. Also, if this bedding is thin, walking over the hard concrete can pressure joints, potentially injure give, or cause sore points in which the horse lies down to rest or sleep. A rubber surface provides a softer and more yielding surface, which minimizes the rick of such injuries.
    Warmth. Rubber Rolls is naturally insulating, which is and and healthier for mounts, especially in winter.
    Traction force. Concrete and wooden floors may be slippery when wet; rubber provide better traction and thereby reduces second hand smoke of injury to horses.
    Bedding. Rubber Mats performs most of the functions of bedding (i. g. insulation, traction, shock reduction, softer surface), reducing the quantity of bedding required. Stable managers, on average, report they will require only half the maximum amount of bedding with a rubber stable mats as with concrete floors. This ends in a considerable saving within bedding, labour and storage space costs.

    There are a few solutions for providing some sort of rubber stable mats. One is rubber stall mats which one lays on top of an existing floor (orite. g. on top on the concrete floor) and join together to create a rubber floor. The other solution comprises liquid rubber which is usually poured onto the concrete floor and then allowed to harden (this takes a few days) to form an individual rubber surface which covers the complete floor. The term 'liquid rubber' refers to the truth that the rubber is in liquid form whether it is initially put onto that stable floor, but after that it forms a solid rubber floor. Both solutions have advantages and disadvantages.

    With liquid rubber, the floor is within a piece and joins while using the wall (in truth, one would normally employ the rubber mats onto the wall to boot for a height of at the least several centimeters). Subsequently, there are no seams or joins which would allow the urine to enter. Furthermore, the rubber bonds while using the concrete floor, so there is absolutely no space for urine or dirt within the rubber. This is a leading advantage over stall mats, as it is but not only healthier but also you don't have to periodically clean underneath it.

    An important advantage associated with stall mats is likely not fixed to the floor, as they rely on their weight to hold them in position. Therefore, one can remove them and use them in another place. This makes them convenient if you're just renting a stall for a period of time. One would not want to use liquid rubber within a temporary stall as it bonds to the concrete floor and may not be removed or reused. Another consideration is that rubber stall mats tend to be less expensive than water rubber.

    Consequently, liquid rubber is a superior solution for some sort of permanent stall, while stall mats are more appropriate for short to help medium term installations.

    RUBBER STABLE MATS

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