Subjects
Aviation
Boilers
Brakes & Clutches
Catalogs
Cooling Towers
Electrical
Flooring
Heating
Home Repair
Insulation
Marine
Medical
Misc
Missiles
Motors
Navy
Packing
Paper & Pulp Mill
Plastics
Plumbing
Pumps
Railroad
Refractories
Roofing
Sewer
Steam Plants
Textiles
Valves
Water Works
Welding
Companies
Anchor Packing Co
Armco
Babcock & Wilcox
Bell & Gossett
Buffalo Pumps
Combustion Eng.
Crane Co
Duriron Co
Fairbanks Valves
Garlock Packing Co
General Electric
Graybar Electric
Grinnell
Harbison-Walker
Jenkins Valves
Johns-Manville
Lunkenheimer
McMaster-Carr
Okonite
Owens-Corning
Ruberoid
Philip Carey
Sarco
Stockham
U.S. Rubber Co
Wellington Sears
Westinghouse
Home
About
Contact
Always Free U.S. Shipping
Inventory
Cooling Towers
Lilie-Hoffmann Cooling Towers
& Havens Cooling Towers
(1959) Towers had transite casings and asbestos cement walls.
Flour Products Company Advertisement
(1959). Sheathing was made of corrugated asbestos-cement.
M. Blazer & Son Advertisement
(1959). Cooling towers had transite paneled casings.
Asbestos was often used in oil refineries, chemical plants, and power stations. Just one of the places asbestos was sometimes found was in the walls of cooling towers.
Advertisements for Phillips Cooling Tower and Marley Comany Cooling Towers
(1959). Towers had asbestos-cement board casings.
Water Cooling Towers Brochure
(1952). Water Cooling Equipment Company. Cement asbestos sheathing for the tower casing exterior.
J. F. Pritchard & Co Brochure
(1951). Transite was used for cooling towers.
Good-Fellow Cooling Towers Advertisement
(1970). E. D. Goodfellow Company. Corrugated asbestos cement board for casting and louvers.
Havens Cooling Towers Advertisement
(1970). Havens Steel Company. Use of asbestos honeycomb fill and Asbesdek Fill.
The Marley Company Advertisement
(1944). World War II era ad for induced draft towers made of transite.