Since 1924, Mobile Rosin Oil has produced rubber-processing
aids,
which have been used extensively and in large volumes by tire
manufacturers. These processing aids consist of proprietary blends
of rosin and
tall oil along with pine tars. Other specialty products many
of which are based on rosins and tall oils are also consumed by manufacturers
of belting, mechanical rubber goods, rubber mats, tubing, and
other
unique applications.
Why Rosin Makes Sense...
It has been long recognized
that rosin based products are excellent components in rubber
processing. When
used
as tackifiers,
significant
cost savings are realized compared to petroleum products and
Phenolic resins. It has been demonstrated in the laboratory as well
as production,
that combinations of rosins and rosin oil blends along with Phenolic
resins provide cost effective tackifying systems in rubber formulations
while maintaining superior physical characteristics of the finished
rubber. Rosin based blends offer more stable pricing and availability
than petroleum-based materials and Phenolic resins.
The use of rosin then and
now
In years past,
rosin-based tackifiers were traditionally controlled to sets of
physical specifications. These tackifiers played an effective
role in controlling costs while performing satisfactorily.
As quality considerations became more demanding,
it was concluded that pine tars and rosin blends lacked the identifiability,
uniformity, and predictability consumers wanted. Tack variation
also became a
focal point of concern.
Pine tars, rosins and rosin oils, when used
in large volumes years ago, were all thought to produce tack variation
in production. For
this reason a trend developed towards using more petroleum-based
products and Phenolic resins. Substantial time, effort and money
was spent on evaluation of the pine family of intermediate raw
materials to investigate how they could be improved upon while
still offering
a lower cost alternative to Phenolic resin tackifiers.
The research
and development program revealed that strictly controlling the
CHEMICAL content, as well as the PHYSICAL specification brought
a dramatic change in the performance of the materials being
used, along with the most important thing, namely, the uniformity
and
predictability of rosin-based blends used as tackifiers. In
some cases, these proprietary
blends even replaced Phenolic resins totally. The absolute
control of rosin acids and fatty acids with rigid plus or minus deviations
gave excellent performance and cost benefits.
In
order to identify the specific chemicals, which made up these highly
complex blends, the use of modern, sophisticated
equipment
became commonplace. Such procedures as gas chromatography,
gel permeation chromatography, high-pressure liquid chromatography,
differential
thermal analysis and atomic absorption have been widely used.
They have enabled Mobile Rosin Oil to specifically identify
chemical
components and meticulously control all production materials
to
a very strict chemical makeup with unparalleled quality.
In turn, manufacturers who utilize materials produced in
such a manner can count
on consistent performance utilizing the highest quality products
at the lowest
possible cost.
During the 1990s, the rosin blend
family of tackifiers made a dramatic comeback in rubber formulations
and
exhibited the uniformity and predictability at the moderate
cost levels
needed
to offset much higher cost tackifiers. In fact, available
data shows that combinations of rosin and tall oil blends with a
Phenolic gives superior performance than Phenolic alone.
It
is important to understand that our family of rubber processing
aids represent our primary product line. Competitive
materials offered, comprise
secondary, even tertiary by-products which "Just
happen" to
conform to given sets of specifications.
Although the rubber reclaimation market technology
in the United States has undergone significant change, many areas
of the world
still utilize
older, more economical methods of recovery. Rubber
softeners and peptizing agents are routinely produced
by Mobile Rosin
Oil and exported to users around the world for use
in reclaiming rubber.
Base Product Line
Even though we classify
ourselves as a custom manufacturer, we do inventory a variety of
base products,
which serve the rubber industry.
Our base products serving the rubber industry are:
| Product |
Description |
| TARTAC
10 |
Extra
Light Pine Tar Compound |
| TARTAC 20 |
Light Pine Tar Compound |
| TARTAC 30 |
Medium Pine Tar Compound |
| TARTAC 35 |
Custom Pine Tar |
| TARTAC 40 |
Heavy Pine Tar Compound
Extra Heavy Pine Tar Most Viscous Pine Tar We Manufacture
|
| MR-455 |
Rubber Compounding Pine Tar; Custom
Designed |
| MR-906 |
An Aromatic Disulfide Peptizer |
| Alatac 100-10 |
Rubber Compounding Blend of tall oil
rosin & fatty
acids
Tightly controlled physical & chemical characteristics. |
| MR-1085A |
Rubber Compounding Blend of tall oil
rosin & fatty
acids.
Tightly controlled physical & chemical characteristics. |
| MR-1085C |
Rubber Compounding Blend of tall oil
rosin & fatty
acids.
Tightly controlled physical & chemical characteristics. |
| MR-1049 |
MR-1085C, cut 50%-50% in naphthenic
process oil.
Custom designed. |
| MR-1086 |
MR-1085C, cut approximately 50%-50%
in naphthenic process oil.
Custom designed. |
|
If
our base products do not fit your needs, let us work with you to
develop a product that will best work for you. For further
information or direct technical assistance regarding our products,
please contact Jalandar Y. Jadhav, Ph.D. at jyj@mobros.com.
|