They needed these for the war effort, especially tires but it was also used in other aspects of the war.
Rubber, along with tin cans, lipstick tubes, and pantiehoes could be very helpful in the war effort. Panitehoes were made into parachutes, lipstick tubes into machine gun rounds, tin cans into tanks, and rubber into gas masks, life rafts, scout car tires, and heavy bomber planes.
Yes, all metal was needed desperately and British people even gave their pots and pans to make weapons.
Anything that could be used to produce something that soldiers needed was frequently classified as 'war materials.' This included everything from coal to iron to gasoline to rubber to nylon.
i dont care you read books
Without an impeccable provenance ... scrap iron value. With one... perhaps slightly more than scrap iron value.
From 1942-1944, World War II halted the Parade for the first time in its history. A shortage of rubber and helium resulted in the balloons being deflated and donated to the government. How many pounds of scrap rubber were donated to the war effort
They had to have rubber to put tires on all the vehicles, airplanes, to make rubber washers, and anything the war enterprise needed rubber for.
Tires for trucks and planes soles for shoes gas masks and oxygen masks
Scrap drives, rationing like rubber, food, gas, metals. Buy war bonds and other things like that
the dutch west indies was the worlds leader in the harvest of latex which is the main substance in making rubber. all the governments involved in the war needed rubber.
Rubber, along with tin cans, lipstick tubes, and pantiehoes could be very helpful in the war effort. Panitehoes were made into parachutes, lipstick tubes into machine gun rounds, tin cans into tanks, and rubber into gas masks, life rafts, scout car tires, and heavy bomber planes.
They are usually shredded and made into road filling or rubber mats.
Because you are using scrap metal rather than iron that is needed
Because you are using scrap metal rather than iron that is needed
Yes, all metal was needed desperately and British people even gave their pots and pans to make weapons.
No, you can not correct a bulge in a tire. Sorry, but that tire is now just scrap rubber.
it is needed for the chemistry home work