-
Legacy Member
Asbestos Danger in Cold War Era Soviet Bloc Iron Curtain Military Surplus?
-
-
01-26-2021 06:48 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Legacy Member
The only asbestos I have encountered was used as muffler wrap, mounts and dampening agent for heavy mounted weapons and engines, paneling in trucks or similar on their vehicles, where you could expect normally elevated operating temperatures. Some uses were in firefighter protective coats and mitts, but I've never encountered it in your basic clothing materials. It is in mask filters. They knew it was a danger too and other than for specialized use, it doesn't really have a good application in clothing. I believe you may find a lot of synthetic materials as well as natural fibers like cotton and wool, but asbestos in a liner would be new to me. M65 Hungarian
is predominately cotton/canvas but has synthetic components.
Once saw a Combloc generator kit getting fired up for testing some equipment when a crack in the muffler forced a cloud of asbestos fiber out the pipe. Had to shut the bay down for a month to remediate.
Now there are other factors to be aware of- radiation dangers posed by night sight sets, switches, panels and dials used in darkened environments (think aircraft, tank or otehr armored vehicles) people routinely miss those.
Last edited by matthanne1; 01-27-2021 at 06:59 PM.
-
-
-
Advisory Panel
We did have mitts for handling the .50 barrels so long ago that were stated to be "Asbestos mitts"...
-
-
Legacy Member
The glove or mitt issued with the M60 m/g that was used to change barrels was asbestos
-
Thank You to RCS For This Useful Post:
-
Contributing Member
Those mittens were good BR, except when soaked in diesel.....tended to give some pretty nasty burn blisters as the oils boiled while you were changing barrels.
-
Thank You to muffett.2008 For This Useful Post:
-
Advisory Panel
Most of ours had burned spots so I'm not sure how fire proof they actually were. .50 barrels were pretty unforgiving, I tried not to touch them much.
-
-
Legacy Member
To be honest your more likely to encounter asbestos in your house than in surplus. It really all depends on what the item is. As mentioned they had asbestos gloves for handling hot barrels, but other things that could have it were brakes, possibly vehicles, etc. Your average clothing isn't likely to have it at all.
For example my house has drywall with plaster over it (just before they figured out they didn't need to plaster over it), odds are my plaster has some asbestos in it as most pre-1990 has some in it. That doesn't 100% mean that is the case though. Anything built before the 90s in Canada
has a decent chance of having asbestos somewhere in it, be the wiring insulated with it, having tiles built with it, the insulation having it, plaster having it, etc. I would say the risk of encountering it in surplus is minimal at best, and even if there is some it likely is in the very very low category, not pure asbestos rather having maybe .5% or less mixed in somewhere. If you get asbestosis I sincerely doubt it will be from the military surplus in your life.
-
-
Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Eaglelord17
Your average clothing isn't likely to have it at all.
I wouldn't have thought so either, unless fireproof clothing...and we didn't see anything like that regularly.
-
-
Legacy Member
asbestos mittens, M1942
M1942 asbestos mittens were used in the US Army through Viet Nam. They are a somewhat dirty white color and a tight weave.
The US GI hot mittens that replaced them in mess halls and machine guns are yellowish and have looped frieze kind of weave to them.
The new ones do not handle the heat as well as the old ones.
Attachment 114620Attachment 114621
-
-
Advisory Panel
Sort of looks like them...except they need the burn marks...
-