| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Product Type | Modular sports surface tile / thermoplastic rubber sheet |
| Dimensions | 250 × 250 × 16 mm |
| Material | Thermoplastic polymer rubber (TPR / TPE) |
| Impact Absorption | ≥ 25% |
| Surface Structure | Thickened hexagonal pattern |
| Bottom Structure | Octagonal support structure |
| Drainage System | Two-way drainage design |
| Connection System | Dense interlocking connection |
| Anti-Slip Performance | Outstanding; non-slip when wet |
| Elastic Bounce | Resilient elastic rebound performance |
| Operating Temperature | -40°C to 100°C |
| Weather Resistance | Strong weathering and aging resistance; colorfast |
| Flexibility | Good folding resistance and flexibility |
| Ground Stability | Good stability under load; even weight distribution |
| Recyclability | 100% recyclable material |
| Color Options | Red, yellow, grass green, sea blue, sky blue, medium grey, dark grey |
| Tensile / Tear Resistance | High tensile strength, toughness, and tear resistance |
| Abrasion Resistance | High abrasion resistance |
| Certifications / Test Standards | [Insert Certification / Test Standard if Available] |
Q1: What does ≥25% impact absorption mean for athlete safety on these tiles?
Impact absorption of ≥25% means the tile surface dissipates a minimum of 25% of the force generated by a falling body or foot strike before it reaches the subfloor and the athlete's joints. This threshold aligns with common sports flooring safety benchmarks used in school and municipal procurement specifications; buyers should request the applicable test standard documentation — [Insert Certification / Test Standard if Available] — to confirm compliance with local authority requirements. The thermoplastic rubber material achieves this through elastic deformation of the tile body under load, followed by full recovery, which also contributes to consistent elastic bounce performance. This makes the tile suitable for sustained training environments where cumulative impact load is a documented injury risk factor.
Q2: How does the tile maintain anti-slip performance on wet surfaces?
The thickened hexagonal surface pattern creates a high-contact-area texture that maintains friction between footwear soles and the tile surface even when the surface is saturated with water. Unlike smooth-faced rubber or PVC tiles that rely solely on material coefficient of friction, the hexagonal geometry provides mechanical grip through surface relief, which remains effective even as the material surface ages. The tile is specified as non-slip when wet, and buyers procuring for outdoor courts in high-rainfall regions should request wet-condition anti-slip test data [Insert Test Standard if Available] to satisfy tender evaluation criteria. No surface treatment, coating, or additive is required to achieve this performance.
Q3: How does the two-way drainage design handle heavy rainfall on outdoor courts?
The two-way drainage channels are integrated into the tile body geometry, running in two perpendicular directions across the underside and side edges of each 250×250mm panel. This allows water to move laterally away from the court surface without relying on a single-direction slope or an external drainage layer beneath the tiles. Under heavy rainfall conditions, water that penetrates through tile joints or surface relief is channeled directly to the perimeter drainage rather than pooling under or between tiles. The dense interlocking connection between adjacent tiles maintains channel alignment across the full installed surface, ensuring drainage continuity even under foot traffic load.
Q4: How are tiles installed using the dense interlocking connection system, and can they be removed?
Each tile connects to adjacent panels via a dense interlocking perimeter system that locks without adhesive, mechanical fasteners, or specialist tools, allowing a standard site crew to install or lift tiles by hand. The interlocking geometry holds tiles in planar alignment under lateral load, preventing edge lift or separation during sports activity. Because no adhesive bond is formed with the substrate, tiles can be individually removed for replacement, reconfiguration, or relocation to a new facility — a relevant factor for municipal procurement programs that require asset reuse or end-of-life recyclability documentation. Installation over a firm, level substrate such as concrete or compacted aggregate is required to achieve specified impact absorption and stability performance.