GreenKnight121
Senior Airman
- 647
- Mar 16, 2014
Kitty-litter is your friend.
Its use for housecats was... but note the line from the article (remember this was the mid-1940s):
As Lowe tells it in his autobiography, The Man Who Discovered the Golden Cat, his family's business sold sand, sawdust and granulated clay, which were used to absorb oil and grease in factories and machine shops.
So it was in use as an oil-absorber in industry well before the first cat officially "used" it (knowing garages, they had "shop cats", and I'm sure the cats "took their ease" in the piles of clay that had not yet been moved from the floor to the rubbish bin).
But was it available in WW2? And the amount needed on a carrier must have been considerable.
I don't know if it was available but you really don't need much for your normal engine drips
I didn't realize it was that new -- invented after the war. Thanks.
Its use for housecats was... but note the line from the article (remember this was the mid-1940s):
As Lowe tells it in his autobiography, The Man Who Discovered the Golden Cat, his family's business sold sand, sawdust and granulated clay, which were used to absorb oil and grease in factories and machine shops.
So it was in use as an oil-absorber in industry well before the first cat officially "used" it (knowing garages, they had "shop cats", and I'm sure the cats "took their ease" in the piles of clay that had not yet been moved from the floor to the rubbish bin).
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