Transporting Menhaden from net to deck of boat, in swinging basket
A big catch of Menhaden made off Narragansett Bay
Menhaden Oil. Of all the marine-animal oils, such as seal, herring, sardine, whale, and menhaden, the latter is the most valuable. It is produced by steam digestion and pressure of the [menhaden or “piogey” fish], which are caught in great quantities off the Atlantic Coast. Prompt cooking and treatment of the fish results in a light-colored oil having very little odor, the residue left in the presses being of great value as a fertilizer. Although several grades of oil termed crude, brown, light, etc., are produced, the most satisfactory for use in paint is that grade termed “light winter pressed.” This oil is of a pale straw color and has a high iodine number which is responsible for its rapid drying value. It contains less of the stearates that precipitate from crude oil, but sufficient to render its film water-shedding and elastic. The presence of too great a quantity of stearates is apt to result in a very soft film, and the use of hard driers, such as the metallic tungates, is therefore advisable with menhaden oil. When mixed with linseed oil paints the odor of menhaden oil is sometimes noticeable, but it disappears entirely after such paints are applied. Its use with linseed oil in technical paints exposed to the salty air of the Coast has given good results, often preventing “checking” and “chalking.”
The following constants were determined on samples of menhaden oil received in the writer’s laboratory:
| Sp. Gr. | Iodine Value | Saponification Number | Acid Number | |
| Light | .927 | 175.8 | 187.9 | 7.55 |
| Medium | .925 | 178.7 | 187.6 | 6.19 |
| Dark | .927 | 178.0 | 187.3 | 7.19 |
Whale Oil. While ordinary whale oil is too dark and odorous to ever come into extensive use as a paint oil, it is probable that the refined oil will be utilized in the manufacture of certain technical paints. Whale oil is boiled from chopped whale blubber, the first trying being the lightest in color, while the later tryings, as well as the product made from bones, are of darker color and of very bad odor. Oil of mirbane is often used to mask this odor. The oil contains large quantities of stearin and palmitin, as well as wax-like constituents which are apt to be thrown out of solution in very cold weather, or when the oil is mixed with other oils. The refined oil, when ground with lead and zinc pigments and mixed with equal parts of linseed oil and treated tung oil, dries to an elastic and soft film. Experiments are being made to utilize whale oil in the linoleum industry.
The analyses of samples of whale oil tested by the writer are as follows: