Guide to Asbestos Trust Fund Claims - (800) 291-0963

How Exposure Occurred During Navy Service on Frigates

🔹 How Exposure Occurred During Navy Service on Frigates

Asbestos exposure on Navy frigates happened through daily operations, routine maintenance, and major shipyard overhauls. Because frigates relied heavily on asbestos for insulation, fireproofing, wiring protection, and machinery safety, sailors disturbed asbestos materials constantly—often without knowing the dust they inhaled was dangerous.

This article explains exactly how exposure occurred during Navy service aboard frigates.


⚙️ Insulation Removal and Replacement

Asbestos insulation covered boilers, pipes, turbines, and bulkheads.

Exposure happened when sailors:

• Removed cracked or damaged insulation
• Cut asbestos cloth and lagging
• Scraped asbestos cement from pipes
• Rewrapped steam and exhaust lines
• Cleaned insulation debris from decks

Each task released clouds of asbestos dust into tight steel spaces.


🔧 Pipe Repairs and Valve Work

Steam, fuel, and water lines ran throughout frigates.

Exposure occurred during:

• Cutting asbestos pipe wrap
• Removing old asbestos gaskets
• Scraping valve flanges
• Repacking pumps with asbestos rope
• Installing new asbestos seals

These jobs created heavy airborne dust near faces and hands.


🔥 Boiler Work and Engine Room Maintenance

Boilers and turbines used thick asbestos insulation.

Sailors were exposed when they:

• Opened boilers for inspection
• Removed insulation for repairs
• Chipped hardened asbestos cement
• Cleaned fireproof coatings
• Reinstalled asbestos coverings

Heat and vibration made insulation brittle and easy to inhale.


⚡ Electrical and Control System Repairs

Electrical systems used asbestos for fire safety.

Exposure happened when sailors:

• Drilled through asbestos-backed panels
• Cut asbestos-coated wiring
• Removed switchgear insulation
• Replaced control panel linings
• Serviced transformers and generators

Dust spread quickly in enclosed electrical rooms.


🎯 Weapons and Combat System Maintenance

Frigates carried guns, missiles, and control systems.

Exposure occurred during:

• Repairing gun mounts with asbestos insulation
• Working in weapons control rooms lined with asbestos
• Servicing missile and launcher areas
• Cleaning ammunition handling spaces
• Welding near insulated weapons systems

Heat and vibration caused materials to crack and shed fibers.


🛠️ Welding and Hot Work

Welding was common aboard frigates.

Exposure occurred when:

• Welding near asbestos-covered pipes
• Using asbestos heat shields
• Grinding near fireproof walls
• Removing insulation before welding
• Breathing dust stirred by sparks and vibration

Hot work made asbestos materials more friable.


🏗️ Shipyard Overhauls and Refits

The heaviest exposure occurred during overhauls.

During shipyard periods:

• Large sections of insulation were removed
• Boilers and pipes were stripped
• Asbestos boards were cut and replaced
• Dust filled entire compartments
• Ventilation spread fibers shipwide

Many sailors say this was their worst exposure.


🌬️ Ventilation Spread Exposure

Frigates used shared air systems.

Exposure occurred when:

• Fibers traveled through ducts
• Dust moved from engine rooms to bunks
• Air blew fibers into food and sleeping areas
• Sailors inhaled fibers off duty

Even sailors far from machinery were exposed.


🛏️ Exposure in Living Areas

Living spaces also contained asbestos.

Exposure occurred from:

• Crumbling wall and ceiling panels
• Floor tiles breaking down
• Pipe insulation running through bunks
• Dust falling from vibration

Sailors breathed asbestos while sleeping.


👷 Who Faced the Highest Risk

Some jobs caused daily asbestos contact:

• Engineers and boiler technicians
• Machinist mates
• Pipefitters
• Electricians
• Welders
• Weapons technicians
• Maintenance crews
• Shipyard workers

These sailors handled asbestos materials constantly.


⏳ Why Exposure Caused Long-Term Disease

Asbestos fibers lodge in the lungs and organ linings.

Diseases often appear:

• 20–50 years after exposure
• Long after Navy service ends
• When damage is already severe

This is why many frigate veterans are diagnosed decades later.


❓ Frigate Exposure – Service FAQs

Did exposure happen every day?
Yes. Aging materials released fibers even without repairs.

Were sailors warned?
Most were never told asbestos was dangerous.

Was protective gear used?
Rarely—most worked without masks.

Can one overhaul cause disease?
Yes. Heavy short-term exposure can be enough.


⚖️ How an Asbestos Lawyer Can Get You Compensation

An asbestos lawyer proves how your frigate service caused exposure.

An asbestos lawyer will:

• Review your duties and ship assignments
• Identify asbestos materials you worked with
• Match products to manufacturers
• Work with doctors to confirm disease
• File lawsuits and trust fund claims

You pay nothing unless compensation is recovered.


📞 Get Help Now

If you served aboard a Navy frigate and later developed mesothelioma, lung cancer, or another asbestos-related disease, you may be entitled to compensation.

You may qualify for:

• Lawsuit settlements or verdicts
• Asbestos trust fund payments
• VA disability and survivor benefits

There is no upfront cost.

📞 Call now for a free, confidential case consultation:
800.291.0963


Find Out If You Qualify Today!

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Call (800) 291-0963 to find out if you have a valid claim.

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