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  2. Sulfur vulcanization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulfur_vulcanization

    Worker placing a tire in a mold before vulcanization. Sulfur vulcanization is a chemical process for converting natural rubber or related polymers into materials of varying hardness, elasticity, and mechanical durability by heating them with sulfur [citation needed] or sulfur-containing compounds. [1]

  3. Repair kit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repair_kit

    Puncture repair kit with tire levers, sandpaper to clean off an area of the inner tube around the puncture, a tube of rubber solution (vulcanizing fluid), round and oval patches, a metal grater and piece of chalk to make chalk powder (to dust over excess rubber solution). Kits often also include a wax crayon to mark the puncture location.

  4. Vulcanization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulcanization

    The most common vulcanizing methods depend on sulfur. Sulfur, by itself, is a slow vulcanizing agent and does not vulcanize synthetic polyolefins. Accelerated vulcanization is carried out using various compounds that modify the kinetics of crosslinking; [8] this mixture is often referred to as a cure package.

  5. Louis Rustin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Rustin

    Louis Désiré Auguste Rustin (1880-1954) was a French cyclist and repairer of tyres in Paris who invented the puncture patch. [1] [2] Car and bicycle tyres had until then been complicated to mend after the inner tube, which held the air, had been penetrated through the outer tyre by a flint or other sharp object.

  6. RTV silicone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RTV_silicone

    RTV silicone (room-temperature-vulcanizing silicone) is a type of silicone rubber that cures at room temperature. It is available as a one-component product, or mixed from two components (a base and curative).

  7. Rubber cement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber_cement

    A bottle of rubber cement, showing a brush built into its cap and a photo about to be cemented to graph paper. Rubber cement (cow gum in British English) is an adhesive made from elastic polymers (typically latex) mixed in a solvent such as acetone, hexane, heptane or toluene to keep it fluid enough to be used.