Preventing Tyre Rucking in Agricultural Stores
Tractors, telehandlers and grain loaders impose strong turning forces on concrete floors, particularly in tight stores and on reversing routes. We design and refurbish agricultural slabs using reinforced concrete slabs, specialist resurfacing systems and polished concrete lanes that limit tyre rucking, prevent surface delamination and support long-term use in agricultural storage buildings.
20 +
Years
Handling Agricultural Tyre Loading
Tyre rucking occurs when thick-treaded agricultural tyres bite into the concrete surface during tight turns, repeated shunting or push-off against bulk piles. Weak toppings, thin screeds and poor joint detailing are especially vulnerable, leading to surface break-up that rapidly escalates. This article looks at how wheel paths, slab structure and surface systems can be planned so agricultural floors cope with real tyre forces rather than just static loads.
Article Focus
How Agricultural Tyres Damage Concrete Floors
Modern agricultural machines use large, heavily ballasted tyres with aggressive tread profiles. When these tyres turn on the spot, reverse under load or push into bulk piles, the rubber lugs grip the surface and drag laterally across the concrete. If the top layer is weak, poorly bonded or inadequately supported, the tyre can lift and shear the surface, creating rucking ridges, flaked patches and early delamination, particularly around joints, doorways and grain stack faces.
Floor performance therefore depends not just on slab thickness but on how
slab construction,
resurfacing systems
and floor layout work with loader routes. Choices made for
grain pusher and telehandler load paths,
surface texture in cereal handling floors
and
clean-down efficiency
all influence how tyre forces are resisted and managed over time.
Key Influences on Tyre Rucking and Delamination
Floor Problems from Agricultural Tyre Forces
Where slab design, toppings or use patterns do not match real tyre forces, damage tends to appear in predictable regions of the floor. These areas often line up with turning points, transfer routes and the faces of bulk commodity piles.
Raised “rucks” or ridges in toppings where tyre lugs have dragged surface material forward.
Local delamination of thin screeds or coatings at turning circles and tight corners.
Spalled joints and broken arrises where tyres cross at shallow angles while loaded.
Patch repairs that break down quickly when loader movements focus traffic on the same line.
Abrasion bands and scuffing in front of push walls and pile faces where loaders work repeatedly.
Increased clean-down time as loose fragments and fines spread into wider store areas.
Our Process
STAGE 1
We first map actual traffic movements within the store, identifying loader turning points, reversing routes and areas where machines push into bulk piles. Existing damage is recorded and compared with these patterns so that the relationship between tyre behaviour and floor condition is clearly understood. This step often draws on previous work carried out for grain pusher and telehandler loading and for managing thermal movement in seasonal buildings.
STAGE 2
Using the damage analysis, we propose a combination of slab strengthening or replacement in the most highly stressed areas and bonded resurfacing systems tailored to cope with tyre shear. Joint locations may be adjusted or reformed to sit away from main turning points. In repeated traffic lanes, polished concrete finishes can be used to provide a dense surface that resists rucking, while still aligning with clean-down and cleaning efficiency objectives. Where chemical attack is present, measures discussed in the article on silage acids and fertiliser exposure are incorporated so the surface is not softened by liquids before tyre loads act on it.
STAGE 3
Flooring work is planned around crop movements so that the most trafficked zones are available when required. Where small changes to driving patterns, turning locations or pile layouts will significantly reduce tyre stress on repaired areas, these are discussed and agreed with operators. Clear information on preferred turning zones and no-turn strips can then be incorporated into markings and housekeeping plans, helping the refurbished floor maintain its performance season after season.
Loader turning circles, entry aprons and pile faces experience far greater tyre shear than quieter parts of the store. Strengthening these zones specifically is often more effective than increasing slab thickness uniformly across the entire building.
Where toppings or resurfacing systems are used, careful preparation and bonding are vital. If the bond fails under tyre forces, delamination will follow regardless of how strong the new surface layer is in isolation.
Joints that sit in the middle of tight turning areas are far more prone to spalling and rucking. Aligning bay boundaries with typical wheel paths reduces joint distress and improves floor behaviour under repeated steering inputs.
Controlling tyre damage also improves hygiene and clean-down. When floors are not shedding surface fragments or creating loose fines, sweeping is more predictable and inspections for residues, pests and contamination are easier to carry out.
If tyre rucking or surface delamination is developing where loaders turn or push into piles, a focused review of slab behaviour and surface systems can clarify the best way forward.
Contact us to discuss your machinery, traffic patterns and store layouts:
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