Rubber Manufacturing Workers
Rubber Manufacturing Workers and Mesothelioma: Asbestos Exposure Risks, Compensation & Legal Rights
Executive Summary
Rubber manufacturing workers experienced significant asbestos exposure through both the production process and the industrial environment of rubber manufacturing facilities.[1] Brake pads, clutch facings, and gaskets manufactured in rubber plants contained 30-70% asbestos as a reinforcing and heat-resistant component, requiring workers to handle raw asbestos materials throughout production. The rubber compounding process involved mixing asbestos fibers with rubber compounds, creating airborne fiber exposure during weighing, mixing, and calendering operations.[2] Beyond product manufacturing, rubber plant workers also encountered asbestos in facility insulation, boiler systems, and processing equipment insulation. According to Danziger & De Llano, rubber manufacturing workers diagnosed with mesothelioma may pursue compensation through trust funds established by brake and friction product manufacturers as well as insulation companies.[3]
The rubber industry's extensive use of asbestos in friction products created dual exposure pathways for manufacturing workers. Those producing brake linings and clutch facings handled asbestos directly as a raw material, mixing it with rubber compounds to create the heat-resistant products used in vehicles and industrial equipment. Workers in other rubber manufacturing roles faced bystander exposure from production areas and facility-wide contamination. Like Automotive Workers who installed the finished brake products, rubber manufacturing workers faced concentrated exposure to asbestos fibers. Major friction product manufacturers including Raybestos-Manhattan, Bendix, and Federal-Mogul operated rubber manufacturing facilities where workers were exposed for decades. Boilermakers and maintenance personnel who serviced plant equipment created additional exposure when disturbing insulation. The brake manufacturer trusts, including Pneumo Abex and Federal-Mogul, now provide compensation for workers exposed during production, with average settlements ranging from $1-1.4 million and additional trust fund recoveries from multiple claims.
Rubber Manufacturing Workers and Asbestos Exposure: At-a-Glance
- Dual exposure pathways — Rubber workers faced both direct handling of raw asbestos fibers during product manufacturing and bystander exposure from facility insulation systems
- Brake linings contained 30-70% asbestos by weight — Workers opened bags of raw chrysotile fiber and mixed it into rubber compounds without adequate respiratory protection
- Airborne fiber levels reached 10-100+ f/cc during mixing — Concentrations exceeded current OSHA limits by 100 to 1,000 times during peak production operations
- Friction products drove the highest exposures — Grinding and finishing brake linings to final dimensions created intense localized fiber clouds in production areas
- Gasket manufacturing added cumulative risk — Compressed asbestos gaskets contained 40-95% asbestos bound with rubber, generating additional fiber release during fabrication
- Vulcanization equipment insulation created secondary exposure — Steam lines and high-temperature processing equipment throughout rubber plants were insulated with asbestos materials
- Major manufacturers knew the risks for decades — Internal documents from Bendix and Raybestos-Manhattan show corporate awareness of asbestos dangers long before they stopped using the material
- Over $30 billion remains available in trust funds — Rubber workers may file against multiple bankruptcy trusts established by friction product and insulation manufacturers
- Average mesothelioma settlements range from $1-1.4 million — Additional trust fund recoveries can supplement litigation settlements for qualifying workers
- Statute of limitations deadlines vary by state — Most states allow 1-3 years from diagnosis to file a mesothelioma claim, making early legal consultation essential
Key Facts
| Metric | Finding |
|---|---|
| Risk classification | Very high — friction product manufacturing workers experienced extreme cumulative asbestos exposure over multi-decade careers[4] |
| Brake lining asbestos content | 30-70% chrysotile asbestos by weight, used as a reinforcing and heat-resistant filler in automotive and industrial friction products[5] |
| Clutch facing asbestos content | 40-60% chrysotile in typical formulations, with asbestos fibers providing friction stability at high operating temperatures[6] |
| Gasket asbestos content | 40-95% asbestos compressed with rubber binders, used in industrial sealing applications across automotive and heavy equipment sectors[7] |
| Peak exposure period | 1920s through 1990s, with some asbestos-containing friction products manufactured into the early 2000s[8] |
| Airborne fiber concentrations | 10-100+ fibers per cubic centimeter documented during mixing operations — 100 to 1,000 times above the current OSHA permissible exposure limit of 0.1 f/cc[2] |
| Primary exposure processes | Raw asbestos mixing, rubber compounding, molding, pressing, grinding, finishing, and quality inspection of friction products[5] |
| Major defendant manufacturers | Bendix Corporation, Raybestos-Manhattan, Johns-Manville, Federal-Mogul, Abex Corporation, and Garlock Sealing Technologies[9] |
| Honeywell corporate successor liability | Honeywell International acquired Bendix Corporation and assumed billions in asbestos liability for friction product claims[10] |
| Trust fund availability | Over 60 active asbestos bankruptcy trusts hold more than $30 billion to compensate workers including friction product manufacturing employees[11] |
| Typical settlement range | $1 million to $1.4 million for mesothelioma cases with documented friction product manufacturing exposure, with additional trust fund recoveries possible[12] |
| Filing deadlines | Statutes of limitation vary by state — most allow 1-3 years from mesothelioma diagnosis; Texas allows 2 years from diagnosis[13] |
What Asbestos Exposure Did Rubber Manufacturing Workers Face?
Rubber manufacturing workers encountered asbestos through multiple high-exposure processes.[8]
Brake Lining and Clutch Facing Production (Highest Exposure):
Workers manufacturing automotive and industrial brake linings faced extreme asbestos exposure:[6]
- Raw Asbestos Mixing: Opening bags of raw asbestos fiber and mixing with rubber compounds generated massive fiber clouds; documented concentrations reached 10-100+ f/cc
- Molding and Pressing: Placing asbestos-rubber compound into heated molds released fibers from the material
- Grinding and Finishing: Machining brake linings and clutch facings to final dimensions created intense localized exposures
- Quality Inspection: Handling finished products and rejected materials added cumulative exposure
Gasket Manufacturing:
Rubber workers also produced asbestos gaskets containing 40-95% asbestos compressed with rubber binders.[7]
Vulcanization Equipment Insulation:
Tire and rubber goods manufacturing used high-temperature vulcanization processes. Equipment and steam lines were insulated with asbestos materials that required periodic maintenance.
| "Rubber workers who made brake linings handled raw asbestos by the ton. They opened bags of fiber, mixed it with rubber compounds, and then ground finished products to specifications—all without adequate respiratory protection. These workers had some of the highest cumulative exposures we document in industrial settings." |
| — Rod De Llano, Founding Partner, Danziger & De Llano |
Which Asbestos Products Did Rubber Manufacturing Workers Encounter?
Rubber workers produced and handled numerous asbestos-containing products:[5]
| Product Type | Asbestos Content | Manufacturers |
|---|---|---|
| Automotive Brake Linings | 30-70% chrysotile | Bendix, Raybestos-Manhattan |
| Industrial Brake Linings | 40-70% various types | Johns-Manville, Abex |
| Clutch Facings | 40-60% chrysotile | Bendix, Raybestos-Manhattan |
| Compressed Asbestos Gaskets | 40-95% asbestos with rubber | Garlock, Johns-Manville |
| Rubber Asbestos Compounds | Variable asbestos content | Multiple manufacturers |
| Equipment Insulation | 15-85% various types | Johns-Manville, Owens-Corning |
Where Were Rubber Manufacturing Workers Most Exposed?
Friction Products Plants: Facilities producing brake linings and clutch facings in Akron, Ohio (tire capital), Connecticut, Pennsylvania, and other industrial centers.[14]
Bendix Facilities: Bendix Corporation operated brake manufacturing plants across the country where workers mixed, molded, and finished asbestos friction products.[9]
Raybestos-Manhattan Plants: Company facilities in Stratford, Connecticut, and other locations produced massive quantities of asbestos brake linings.
Tire Manufacturing: Major tire producers including Goodyear, Firestone, and Goodrich operated plants where workers faced exposure from vulcanization equipment insulation and some asbestos-containing rubber compounds.
| Honeywell Liability: Honeywell International acquired Bendix Corporation's assets and assumed significant asbestos liability. The company has paid billions in asbestos settlements and continues to face ongoing litigation from former friction product workers. |
What Compensation Can Rubber Manufacturing Workers Receive?
Rubber manufacturing workers diagnosed with mesothelioma may be entitled to substantial compensation.[12]
Key Defendant Manufacturers:
- Bendix Corporation/Honeywell: Honeywell acquired Bendix and assumed massive asbestos liability; has paid billions in settlements
- Raybestos-Manhattan: Major friction products manufacturer; bankruptcy trust established
- Johns-Manville: Produced friction products and industrial brake materials; trust has paid over $5 billion
- Garlock Sealing Technologies: Gaskets and friction materials; trust established following 2010 bankruptcy
Applicable Trust Funds:
Over 60 asbestos bankruptcy trusts hold more than $30 billion for victims:[11]
- Johns-Manville Trust – Friction products, insulation; over $5 billion paid
- Garlock Sealing Technologies Trust – Gaskets, friction materials
- Multiple friction product manufacturer trusts
Litigation Against Solvent Defendants:
Honeywell (through Bendix acquisition) remains a solvent defendant actively litigating asbestos cases, allowing for trial verdicts and negotiated settlements beyond trust fund claims.[10]
| "Friction product workers have strong cases because the manufacturers knew asbestos was deadly but continued using it for decades. Internal documents from Bendix, Raybestos-Manhattan, and other companies show they were aware of the dangers long before they stopped putting asbestos in brake linings." |
| — Paul Danziger, Founding Partner, Danziger & De Llano |
How Can Rubber Manufacturing Workers Document Exposure?
Successful claims require documenting employment and exposure:[15]
Employment Records:
- Work history at friction products facilities (Bendix, Raybestos, etc.)
- Job descriptions documenting specific work areas (mixing, molding, grinding)
- Union records for unionized rubber workers
Product Documentation:
- Specific products manufactured (brake linings, clutch facings, gaskets)
- Asbestos content specifications from company records
- Safety records (or lack thereof) regarding respiratory protection
| Documentation Tip: Workers at Bendix or Raybestos-Manhattan facilities have extensive litigation history establishing exposure conditions. Your attorneys can access prior testimony and company documents from thousands of previous cases.[1] |
Frequently Asked Questions
What types of rubber manufacturing jobs had the highest asbestos exposure?
Workers involved in friction product manufacturing — specifically those who mixed raw asbestos fibers with rubber compounds, operated molding presses, and ground or finished brake linings and clutch facings — experienced the highest exposure levels. Airborne fiber concentrations during mixing operations reached 10-100+ fibers per cubic centimeter, far exceeding safe limits.[2] Even workers in adjacent production areas faced significant bystander exposure from airborne fibers generated during these processes.
Can rubber manufacturing workers still file mesothelioma claims today?
Yes. Mesothelioma has a latency period of 20-50 years, meaning many workers exposed during the peak production era of the 1920s-1990s are only now receiving diagnoses. Each state has its own statute of limitations for filing claims, typically allowing 1-3 years from the date of diagnosis.[13] Workers should consult an experienced mesothelioma attorney promptly after diagnosis to preserve their legal rights.
What compensation is available for rubber workers with mesothelioma?
Rubber manufacturing workers may pursue compensation through multiple channels simultaneously: personal injury lawsuits against manufacturers like Honeywell (Bendix successor), asbestos bankruptcy trust fund claims from over 60 active trusts holding $30+ billion, and workers' compensation benefits.[11] Average mesothelioma settlements for friction product workers range from $1 million to $1.4 million, with additional trust fund recoveries supplementing litigation awards.[12]
How did asbestos get into rubber products?
Manufacturers deliberately added chrysotile asbestos fibers to rubber compounds because asbestos provided heat resistance, friction stability, and structural reinforcement at a low cost. Brake linings contained 30-70% asbestos, clutch facings contained 40-60%, and compressed gaskets contained up to 95% asbestos mixed with rubber binders.[5] These formulations remained standard across the industry for decades despite mounting evidence of health hazards.
Is Honeywell still liable for Bendix asbestos exposure?
Yes. Honeywell International acquired Bendix Corporation and assumed its asbestos liabilities. Honeywell remains a solvent defendant that actively litigates and settles mesothelioma cases, having paid billions in asbestos-related claims.[10] Because Honeywell is still operating and financially solvent, claimants can pursue full trial verdicts and negotiated settlements rather than being limited to trust fund payments.
What is the difference between direct and bystander exposure in rubber plants?
Direct exposure occurred when workers physically handled raw asbestos materials during product manufacturing — opening fiber bags, mixing compounds, and grinding finished products. Bystander exposure affected workers in other areas of the plant who inhaled airborne asbestos fibers generated by nearby production operations or released from facility insulation during maintenance work.[8] Both exposure types can cause mesothelioma, and both support legal claims for compensation.
How can family members of rubber workers be affected?
Family members of rubber manufacturing workers faced secondary asbestos exposure when workers carried asbestos fibers home on their clothing, shoes, and hair. Spouses who laundered contaminated work clothes were particularly at risk. Courts have recognized secondary exposure claims in mesothelioma cases, allowing family members to pursue compensation from the same manufacturers responsible for the worker's occupational exposure.[1]
Quick Statistics
- 70+ years of asbestos use — The rubber industry incorporated asbestos into friction products from the 1920s through the 1990s, spanning more than seven decades of worker exposure[8]
- Chrysotile was the dominant fiber type — Over 95% of asbestos used in rubber friction products was chrysotile (white asbestos), though all forms of asbestos are classified as Group 1 carcinogens[2]
- Akron, Ohio was the epicenter — Known as the "Rubber Capital of the World," Akron hosted major tire and rubber manufacturing facilities where thousands of workers were exposed[14]
- No safe level of asbestos exposure exists — The current OSHA permissible exposure limit is 0.1 f/cc, but health authorities recognize that any asbestos inhalation carries some cancer risk[4]
- Multiple trusts cover friction product exposure — Workers can file claims against Johns-Manville Trust ($5+ billion paid), Garlock Sealing Trust, and numerous other manufacturer-specific funds[11]
- Mesothelioma latency averages 20-50 years — Workers exposed in the 1970s-1990s may not develop symptoms until the 2020s-2040s, making timely medical screening essential[6]
- Garlock bankruptcy occurred in 2010 — Garlock Sealing Technologies, a major gasket manufacturer, established its trust fund after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection[12]
- Raybestos-Manhattan operated since the early 1900s — The company manufactured asbestos friction products for nearly a century before asbestos liabilities led to its reorganization[9]
- Workers' compensation does not bar civil lawsuits — Rubber workers can pursue both workers' compensation benefits and separate personal injury claims against third-party manufacturers[7]
- Prior litigation provides extensive evidence — Thousands of previous asbestos cases against Bendix, Raybestos-Manhattan, and other manufacturers have generated company documents and deposition testimony that strengthen new claims[15]
Get Help Today
If you or a loved one worked in rubber manufacturing and has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, you may be entitled to significant compensation. The attorneys at Danziger & De Llano have decades of experience representing industrial workers exposed to asbestos. Call today for a free, confidential case evaluation: (866) 222-9990.
Additional resources for rubber manufacturing workers and their families:
- Mesothelioma Lawyers Near Me — Find experienced mesothelioma attorneys and take a free case evaluation quiz
- Mesothelioma.net — Comprehensive patient resources including treatment information and support services
- Mesothelioma Lawyer Center — Legal guidance for asbestos exposure victims and their families
Related Pages
- Automotive Workers and Asbestos Exposure
- Asbestos Trust Fund Compensation Guide
- Occupational Exposure Index
- Boilermakers and Asbestos Exposure
- Secondary Asbestos Exposure
- Johns-Manville Trust Fund
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Asbestos Exposure Lawyers, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Asbestos Exposure, Mesothelioma Lawyer Center
- ↑ Mesothelioma Compensation, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Mesothelioma Risk: Shipyard, Oil & Construction Workers, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Automotive Asbestos Exposure, Mesothelioma.net
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 Occupational Asbestos Exposure, Mesothelioma Lawyer Center
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 Asbestos Exposure Claims, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 Tire & Rubber Workers and Asbestos, Mesothelioma.net
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 Asbestos Product Manufacturers, Mesothelioma Lawyer Center
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 Honeywell Asbestos, Mesothelioma Lawyer Center
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 Mesothelioma Trust Funds, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 Asbestos Lawsuits & Payouts, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 Mesothelioma Statute of Limitations, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Industrial Workers and Asbestos, Mesothelioma.net
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 Keys to Proving Asbestos Exposure, Mesothelioma.net