Product Description

The Banbury mixer was the dominant internal mixer used to blend, masticate, and compound rubber and thermoplastic stocks across U.S. industry from the 1920s through the late 1970s. The mixer was manufactured by Farrel Corporation (and its predecessor entity Farrel-Birmingham Company of Ansonia, Connecticut) and was specified in nearly every American rubber-products plant, tire factory, and compound house of the era.

Banbury mixers were used to compound rubber for tires, hoses, belts, gaskets, sealing components, suspension parts, brake parts, vibration mounts, and a wide variety of molded rubber products. They were also used in plastics compounding operations to blend resin, fillers, pigments, and reinforcement into uniform molding stock.

Per publicly filed U.S. asbestos litigation, Farrel Corporation has appeared as a corporate defendant in numerous asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death actions tied to the Banbury product line.


Asbestos Content

Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed asbestos litigation that Farrel Banbury rubber mixers incorporated asbestos in one or more of the structural roles common to internal mixers of the era:

Steam-jacket insulation — Banbury mixers operated at elevated temperatures, with heated or cooled jackets surrounding the mixing chamber. Plaintiffs alleged that the jacket insulation and lagging consisted of asbestos-containing materials specified to retain process temperature and protect plant personnel.

Rotor and chamber gaskets — The dust-tight seals separating the mixing chamber from external bearings and drive shafts were alleged to incorporate compressed asbestos gasket material.

Drop-door and discharge gaskets — The hinged drop-door at the base of the mixing chamber that released the compounded batch was sealed with asbestos-bearing gaskets that were periodically replaced.

Rotor packing and shaft seals — Asbestos rope packing was alleged to be used at the rotor shaft entries.

Hopper and ram insulation — The hopper above the mixer and the hydraulic ram that forced material into the chamber operated in proximity to asbestos-insulated hot surfaces.

Process piping and steam-line insulation — The steam supply, condensate return, and chilled-water lines serving the Banbury jacket system were alleged to be wrapped in asbestos-containing pipe insulation.


How Workers Were Exposed

Rubber compounders, plant maintenance mechanics, millwrights, and plant electricians were exposed to asbestos during multiple Banbury-related operations:

  • Gasket replacement — Drop-door gaskets, chamber gaskets, and shaft-seal packing were periodically replaced during planned maintenance. Workers scraped and cut asbestos gasket and packing material by hand.
  • Insulation removal and repair — When the steam-jacket insulation jacketing tore or pulled away, maintenance crews stripped and replaced the asbestos-bearing material.
  • Rotor changes and rebuilds — Major rebuilds required disassembling the entire mixer, disturbing all asbestos-bearing seals and insulation in the process.
  • Steam-line repair — Pipefitters working on the steam-supply and condensate lines disturbed pipe insulation.
  • Batch dumping — When the drop-door was opened to release a finished batch, residual fiber from disturbed gaskets entered the operator breathing zone.
  • Cleaning operations — Banbury chambers and surrounding equipment were periodically cleaned, generating airborne dust from accumulated asbestos fiber.

Plaintiffs alleged that rubber compounders, mixer operators, plant maintenance mechanics, millwrights, pipefitters, plant electricians, and bystander workers were exposed to airborne asbestos fiber during these routine activities — often over years or decades of continuous Banbury operation in compounding plants and tire factories.


Plants Where Banbury Mixers Were Installed

Banbury mixers were deployed across the U.S. rubber and plastics industries from the 1920s through the late 1970s — including tire factories, hose and belt plants, rubber-component manufacturers, gasket and seal molders, plastics compounding houses, and equipment-component manufacturers serving the automotive, heavy-equipment, electrical, and consumer industries.

Public asbestos litigation records associate Banbury exposure with rubber compounders, mixer operators, and plant maintenance crews who worked at facilities producing molded rubber parts for industrial machinery — including the rubber suspension pads, brake pads, mounts, and seals used in heavy construction and earthmoving equipment.

This information reflects facility history, exposure pathways, and product documentation drawn from publicly filed asbestos litigation, federal regulatory records, and industry archives. It does not constitute a finding of fact or liability with respect to any specific manufacturer, supplier, or facility operator.


Documented End-User Plants and Worker Populations

Farrel Banbury mixers were the dominant U.S. internal-mixer line and were installed across virtually every major U.S. tire plant, rubber-component plant, rubber-compounding house, and plastics-compounding operation of the asbestos era. Banbury-related worker exposure occurred at:

Tire Manufacturing Plants

Major U.S. tire manufacturers historically ran Banbury mixer lines as the central rubber-compounding equipment at their tire plants, including:

  • Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company — Akron OH and multiple U.S. tire-plant locations
  • Firestone Tire & Rubber Company — Akron OH and multiple U.S. tire-plant locations
  • B.F. Goodrich Company — Akron OH and multiple U.S. tire-plant locations
  • Uniroyal Inc. (formerly U.S. Rubber Company) — multiple U.S. tire-plant locations
  • General Tire & Rubber Company — Akron OH and multiple U.S. tire-plant locations
  • Cooper Tire & Rubber Company — Findlay OH and multiple U.S. tire-plant locations
  • Dunlop Tire Corporation — Buffalo NY and other U.S. plants
  • Armstrong Rubber Company and other historical U.S. tire manufacturers

Rubber-Component Manufacturing Plants

  • Heavy-equipment rubber-component plants — including Caterpillar High Performance Molded Products (HPMP) Boonville Missouri (rubber engine seals, suspension pads, brake pads, mounts for Caterpillar heavy off-highway equipment), and similar rubber-component plants supplying John Deere, Komatsu, Case-IH, AGCO, and other heavy-equipment OEMs
  • Automotive rubber-component plants — engine-seal, hose, belt, vibration-mount, and weatherstrip manufacturers supplying Big Three U.S. automakers and tier-one automotive suppliers
  • Gasket and sealing-component plants — molded rubber gaskets, packing, and seals for industrial and OEM applications
  • Hose and belt manufacturers — Gates Rubber, Goodyear Industrial Products, and other hose/belt plants
  • Friction-product manufacturers — brake-lining and clutch-facing manufacturers using Banbury compounding to produce friction compound

Plastics-Compounding Houses

  • Polyolefin, PVC, and engineering-thermoplastic compounding houses — masterbatch producers, custom compound houses, and resin-conversion plants supplying the U.S. plastics industry
  • Color and additive masterbatch plants — masterbatch and concentrate producers

Worker Populations Across All End-User Plants

Rubber compounders, mixer operators, mold-line operators, plant maintenance mechanics, millwrights, pipefitters, steam-system technicians, plant electricians, material handlers, and bystander workers were exposed to airborne asbestos fiber from Banbury mixer jacket insulation, drop-door gaskets, shaft packing, and steam-line lagging across all of these end-user plants during the asbestos era.

If You Worked at a Tire Plant, Rubber-Component Plant, or Plastics-Compounding House With Farrel Banbury Mixers

If you operated, maintained, or rebuilt Farrel Banbury rubber mixers at any time 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.