Garolite G-9
Product Description
Garolite G-9 was an industrial laminate grade meeting NEMA designation G-9, originally formulated with asbestos cloth and melamine resin for high-arc-resistance electrical applications. G-9 was specified for high-voltage switchgear components, arc chutes, and other applications where arc resistance was the primary specification.
The asbestos-era G-9 formulation continued through the late 1970s before being reformulated to glass cloth. The Garolite brand was produced by Spaulding Fibre and successor entities.
Asbestos Content
Litigation records document that Garolite G-9 was alleged to have contained asbestos fiber as a functional filler or reinforcing agent. Asbestos fibers were incorporated into industrial materials of this category to enhance heat resistance, mechanical strength, dimensional stability under thermal cycling, and electrical-insulation properties.
Plaintiffs alleged that asbestos fibers in Garolite G-9 were typically chrysotile, amosite, or a combination thereof — consistent with industry practice for the asbestos era. When the cured material was subjected to mechanical operations (drilling, grinding, sanding, machining, cutting) or when raw material was handled and processed, those fibers could become airborne.
How Workers Were Exposed
Litigation records document multiple exposure pathways for workers who handled Garolite G-9:
Raw material handling: Workers who received, weighed, blended, or transferred the material in production environments could disturb settled asbestos fibers and generate airborne dust.
Manufacturing operations: Workers operating the production equipment — molding presses, lamination presses, compounding mixers, cutting saws — were exposed during normal operation, equipment cleaning, and routine maintenance.
Machining and finishing of finished material: Secondary operations including drilling, reaming, turning, grinding, sanding, sawing, and routing of Garolite G-9 generated fine dust containing asbestos fibers. These operations were performed by machinists, toolmakers, electricians, and assembly workers who may not have been informed that the material contained asbestos.
Maintenance and tooling work: Maintenance workers responsible for cleaning equipment, servicing presses and mixers, and disposing of accumulated dust in facilities that produced or processed Garolite G-9 could encounter substantial exposure during cleaning and repair operations.
The occupational exposures associated with asbestos-containing industrial laminates and molding compounds are consistent with patterns recognized by OSHA and NIOSH. The latency period for asbestos-related diseases is typically 20-50 years between initial exposure and diagnosis, meaning workers exposed to products like Garolite G-9 during the mid-twentieth century may be receiving diagnoses today.
See also
- Garolite G-9 trade-vertical reference at plasticmoldingasbestos.com
- Worker occupations: molders, press operators, tumbler operators, flash trimmers, compounders
- Free case evaluation
References to manufacturers, products, and litigation history reflect what has been alleged or documented in publicly filed asbestos litigation. This information does not constitute a finding of fact or liability.