Old Tires Make Great Survival Sandals! Check it Out:

sandals

Eventually, even the best-prepared survivalist will run out of stock if the survival situation they are facing is drastic enough.

That includes running out of shoes and in that scenario, you have to beg, steal or borrow – or make your own – as doing without is dangerous and unhealthy.

Making Your Tire Sandals

First, place either foot in the center of a large piece of paper, at least an 8 1/2 x 14. Trace around your foot, being careful at all times to keep the pencil straight up and down. Next make a mark on each side, directly down from the point on your ankles. Also make a mark at the point along the inside of your foot, directly back from your big toe.

Remove your foot from the pattern. Now sketch a bigger outline around the tracing of your foot. Add about 3/8 inch for the toes and sides, but not to the back.

Then use a ruler and bisect the pattern lengthwise, extending the line three inches past the heel. This serves as a guide to help you sketch the rear tab accurately.

Now connect the marks you made by your ankles, extending a line three inches beyond each side of the pattern. These tabs will be sketched in front of this line.

Also draw a line for the front tabs, extending from the single mark across the pattern, perpendicular to the line that bisects the foot lengthwise.

The positioning of all these tabs is quite variable, and you can choose to move them forward or back, or at angles to one another, and all usually work, although the arrangement I have suggested may work more consistently. Problems usually arise with the front set of tabs. When at angles across the pattern they can twist a little and dig into your foot.

Now sketch in the five tabs, as shown on the pattern. These tabs are sized width-wise for 3/4 inch wide strapping, and should be made according to the approximate dimensions I've written in on the pattern, regardless of how big or small the foot. If anything you might make some adjustments length-wise, adjusting for particularly large or small feet. Finally, sketch in the holes that you will cut out to thread the strapping through. This just helps you remember to cut them the right direction when you get to that stage. Cut the pattern out, and it can be used for both sandals, assuming your feet are fairly similar to one another.

As for tires, I would recommend truck tires, rather than car tires. The “corner” of any tire, where the sidewalls and tread come together, is always much thicker than the rest. You can work with that thickness in the tabs of the sandals, but not in the sole itself. Pickup tires are typically wide enough to work with, and you can make about three pair of sandals from one tire.

Most importantly, always use tires that do not have steel cables running through them. All tires have some kind of fibrous reinforcement in them, typically nylon or rayon threads. Most of the newer tires also have a layer of steel cables, which is not workable at all. Still, there are a few billion of the older tires around without steel cables, so you should not have to look too far to find some. Just look on the sidewalls of the tire and it will be printed there how many plies of nylon, rayon, or steel are imbedded in the rubber.

We used simple utility knives to cut out our first sandals. Doing it this way you can trace around the pattern on the outside of the tire and start cutting. However, I must say this is very laborious and not much fun. It is hard work, and you could easily slip and cut yourself with the utility knife. Along the way I have discovered that it is much easier and more enjoyable to cut tires using sharp wood chisels or a bandsaw.

To do the chisel or bandsaw method you must first remove a section of tire. This allows you to run the piece through the bandsaw, or to put it on a wooden block, where you can chisel from the inside out.

A circular saw works fairly well for cutting tires, except that it creates a lot of blue-black smoke, and binds frequently. Cut out a piece that is at least a half inch longer than your pattern, and save as much of the sidewalls as you reasonably can.

These are useful later for making the buckles. Do not try cutting through the inner edge of the tire, which has an imbedded steel band to fit the tire snug against the rim.

Now, trace the pattern on the inside of the tire, being certain that the pattern is centered and straight on the tire. Even a slight 1/2 inch angle along the length of a sandal can cause problems when you wear it.

I've done separate tests, cutting out the sandals with chisels and with a bandsaw, and the bandsaw method is only a little faster. A good set of wood chisels works just fine if you do not have the bandsaw.

I would suggest making only one sandal at a time, and completing it. Finish the one and try it on; you might think of some modifications to improve the next one.

Few of my pairs of sandals are exactly identical, as I usually find some new idea to try on that second sandal.

The next step, after cutting out the sandal, is to thin the four side tabs. The tabs are generally cut from that “corner” on the tire, where there is a thick lump of tread. These are easiest to thin on a bandsaw. You can, however, do a crude but adequate job by cutting the lump down with some careful chiseling or with a sharp knife. Thin down as close as you can to the nylon/rayon plies, without actually cutting any of them. This step is not easy by any method I have found, and I typically leave 1/8 to 1/4 inch of rubber covering the plies, for a total thickness of up to half an inch. That is still quite thick, but thin enough to work.

Now, to make the tabs flex upward, take a razor blade and slice straight into the tread of the tire at the joint where the tab attaches. Slice in all the way until the plies inside are exposed. Be careful not to cut into those fibers.

Chisel out each of the eyelets, where the strapping will be threaded through. For this I use a 1 inch chisel and a 1/4 inch chisel. Be careful to not cut too close to the edge. If you break out the side of a tab, then you generally have to start all over.

Also cut a set of buckles from the sidewalls of the tire. These are easy to do.

For strapping, I use a sort of a nylon harness strapping, available at farm and ranch supply stores. 3/4 inch wide strapping works well with the one inch slots.

Cut pieces that are extra long, you can trim them off after you thread them through. Use a match, and melt the end of the nylon strap to secure the threads.

To do the back strap, thread through the hole marked point (C) on the pattern and stitch an inch or so of the strap back on itself. Thread around through the other eyelets, through the buckle, through the other hole on the first tab, and once again through the buckle. The front strap should be threaded through the buckle, through both eyelets, and back through the buckle again. This system is a little hard to adjust, but once set, I find I can slip my foot in and out, without having to tighten or loosen them.

These types of handmade sandals will not likely win a beauty contest, but they will ensure you have protection for most types of travel if you need it.

Best of all, one pickup sized tire should yield about three pairs of sandals, which, if you are forced to resort to this type of footwear, means you can make more as you need them or make a bunch at one time for future use.

To learn more about using old tires to make sandals, check out Primitive Living Skills.

Featured Image via Primitive Living Skills


27 Comments

  1. Bryan Mcfarlane said:

    I bought a pair in the Philippines in the 80’s, one peice of advice, don’t step on an oil slick road, like walking on ice

  2. Ryan Oberst said:

    My dad told me during the Vietnam war the VC wore sandals made from old tires.

  3. James Pallasch said:

    In the1958 era I purchased ‘Jesus shoes’ in Mexico made of used tires. In Africa, shoes are often 2 liter pop bottles squashed with holes punched for the twine to hold them on their feet. That my friends, is poverty unimagined in this day, I would imagine the same may be true in Haiti as the poorest nation in the western hemisphere after years of oppression by ruthless dictators.

  4. Steven LaRose said:

    Yep my dad said the same thing… So they had to start burning their worn out jeep and truck tires.. The smell sucked but was a great bug repellent

  5. JT Vang said:

    I just want to know all seasons or performance type tires?

  6. Hooey Timothy said:

    These sandals are not that good,I mean the ones we had in Vietnam .They were made with just a knife.Rubber gets hot on your feet..

  7. Jess Weaver said:

    The VC did. A pair of VC sandals was a highly sought after trophy. That, and VC ears…

  8. Mike Kelly said:

    The viet cong did this routinely during the war. I cant think of a better shoe sole than tire tread. It owold last forever.u

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