USS McCard (DD-822) was a Gearing-class destroyer commissioned 26 October 1946 and serving the U.S. Navy through 1980 — Cold War Atlantic Fleet, Korean War, and Vietnam-era anti-submarine warfare operations.

The 9-entry equipment manifest below is sourced from ship-specific BUSHIPS (Bureau of Ships) documentation identifying machinery and equipment installed aboard. Each entry is documented equipment with verified manufacturer attribution — primary-source material for asbestos-exposure case development by Navy veterans and surviving families.

Equipment Manifest

Equipment Manifest — USS McCard (DD-822). 10 machinery/equipment entries identified through ship-specific BUSHIPS documentation. Manufacturers in bold link to documented asbestos-product history on AsbestosIndex.com.
EquipmentManufacturerQtyNotes
HIGH PRESSURE TURBINEWestinghouse Elec.
CRUISING TURBINEWestinghouse Elec.
LOW PRESSURE TURBINEWestinghouse Elec.
Sonar Model Equipment AN/SQS-4Unknown1Mod. 2 dome size 185 inches
H.P. Turbine #2Westinghouse Electric and Mfg. Co.1Type Single Flo Impulse, Serial #2-A-9856-24
L.P. Turbines #1 and #2Westinghouse2Cruising Turbines
Main Feed Pumps #2 and #3Worthington Pump and Machinery Corp.Mfgr.
Emergency Feed Pump #1Warren Steam Pump Co.Mfgr.
BoilersBabcock and Wilcox4Divided Furnace, Single Uptake, DD692 Class. Renewal of furnace refractories
Boilers #1, 2, 3 and 4Babcock and Wilcox4Divided Furnace, Single Uptake, DD692 Class

Asbestos-Containing Materials Aboard McCard

The standard asbestos-containing materials installed throughout U.S. Navy destroyers of this era are documented to have included:

  • Pipe lagging and thermal insulation on main steam, feed-water, fuel-oil, condensate, and saltwater piping throughout machinery spaces
  • Boiler block insulation, refractory brick, and gun-blocks around the main boilers
  • Asbestos gaskets and braided packing in valves, flanges, pumps, condensers, heat exchangers, and turbine glands
  • Insulation jackets and removable lagging on main propulsion turbines, reduction gears, ship-service turbine generators, and forced-draft blowers
  • Sheet asbestos and Marinite panels as fire-stops, bulkhead insulation, and overhead insulation
  • Vinyl asbestos floor tile (VAT) in passageways, berthing, mess decks, and habitable compartments
  • Asbestos rope, wick, and tape in gland-seal applications throughout the engineering plant

Sailors in Boilerman, Machinist’s Mate, Engineman, Electrician’s Mate, Hull Maintenance Technician, Damage Controlman, and other engineering ratings worked routinely in spaces where these materials were installed, maintained, ripped out, and replaced.

VA Benefits for McCard Veterans

The Department of Veterans Affairs recognizes mesothelioma, asbestos-related lung cancer, asbestosis, and pleural disease as conditions presumed to be service-connected for Navy veterans with documented asbestos exposure. The McCard equipment manifest is direct documentary evidence of the asbestos-containing materials her crew worked around throughout her service life.

Parallel claims against the asbestos bankruptcy trust funds established by the manufacturers of these products are also available, and do not reduce VA compensation.

Speak with an asbestos attorney with Navy veterans experience →


Equipment manifest derived from public-record BUSHIPS documentation specific to USS McCard (DD-822). Manufacturer attribution links to documented asbestos-product histories on AsbestosIndex.com where available. Editorial review applied per site standards.

Gearing-Class destroyer — Class Background

Ship-specific service history is not available for this vessel in public records. The class-level information below applies to all ships in her class. Source: Wikipedia — Gearing-Class destroyer

The Gearing class consisted of 98 destroyers built for the U.S. Navy during and after World War II, representing a minor modification of the Allen M. Sumner class with a 14-foot lengthened hull amidships to increase fuel storage and operating range. Though the first ships did not enter service until mid-1945, the class continued operating with successive upgrades through the 1970s, including extensive FRAM modernization conversions in the 1960s that transformed them into anti-submarine warfare platforms. Many surplus Gearing-class destroyers were subsequently transferred to other nations, where they served for many additional years.

Class Overview

Total Ships in Class
98
Construction Era
1944-1946
Service Era
1945-1970s

Class Mission & Role

Fleet destroyers designed to provide anti-aircraft, anti-surface, and anti-submarine warfare capabilities, with increased range and upgradeability compared to previous destroyer classes.

Primary Builders

  • Bath Iron Works
  • Federal Shipbuilding
  • Bethlehem Steel
  • Todd Pacific Shipyards
  • Consolidated Steel

Asbestos Materials in this Class

The article does not document asbestos use in the Gearing-class. Standard pre-1980 U.S. Navy construction included asbestos in pipe lagging, boiler insulation, gaskets, and habitability spaces.