Product Description

American Blower Corporation manufactured industrial fans, blowers, forced-draft and induced-draft fans, air-handling units, and ventilation equipment from approximately the 1880s through the late 1970s. American Blower products were widely installed across U.S. electric utility power plants (boiler forced-draft and induced-draft service), petroleum refineries, chemical plants, paper mills, steel mills, naval shipyards and Navy vessels, federal facilities, and a broad range of U.S. industrial worksites.

Trane US Inc. is the corporate successor to American Blower. The combined Trane product line (including American Blower fans, Trane pumps, Kewanee boilers, American Standard) has been named in publicly filed OBLF petitions as a Product Manufacturer Defendant.

Asbestos Content

Plaintiffs alleged American Blower fans and blowers incorporated asbestos in:

  • Fan and blower gaskets at flange and inspection-port penetrations
  • Shaft packing at bearing housings
  • Asbestos-bearing thermal insulation on hot fans (forced-draft and induced-draft fans on hot boiler exhaust)
  • Asbestos brake and clutch components in heavy-duty industrial fan drives

How Workers Were Exposed

Industrial maintenance mechanics, HVAC technicians, sheet metal workers, and insulators installing, servicing, and rebuilding American Blower fans and blowers — including bearing service, gasket replacement, packing replacement, and asbestos insulation work on connected ductwork and equipment.

If You Worked With American Blower Fans

If you worked with American Blower industrial fans or blowers (under American Blower or Trane corporate ownership) during the asbestos era — and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, or another asbestos-related illness — you may have legal rights.

Free, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O’Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956

All consultations are free. No fee unless a financial recovery is made on your behalf.