Torpedo Juice

Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules

The Pacific Theater vets I knew provided some varied insight. "Torpedo juice" likely began with submariners who raided the alcohol for torpedoes and things expanded to Avenger squadrons...and beyond.

Grape fruit juice, orange juice and other mixers were considered appropriate.
 
My Uncle Fred mentioned that the Navy had tried to stop sailors from drinking the alcohol by adding methanol at one point. After several sailors were struck blind from drinking it, they switched to an oil called "croton".

If they drank the alcohol cut with Croton oil, it gave the sailors violent cramps and severe diarehha, but no lasting side effects.

Their answer to this, was to distill (like a Gin mill) the oil out of the alcohol.

Uncle Fred also mentioned that they preferred Pineapple juice or Grapefruit (when they could get it).

By the way, he was a Torpedoman serving aboard subs during the war.
 
My Uncle Fred mentioned that the Navy had tried to stop sailors from drinking the alcohol by adding methanol at one point. After several sailors were struck blind from drinking it, they switched to an oil called "croton".

If they drank the alcohol cut with Croton oil, it gave the sailors violent cramps and severe diarehha, but no lasting side effects.

Their answer to this, was to distill (like a Gin mill) the oil out of the alcohol.

Uncle Fred also mentioned that they preferred Pineapple juice or Grapefruit (when they could get it).

By the way, he was a Torpedoman serving aboard subs during the war.
My father (PT boats in the Pacific) said something similar, except they filtered the torpedo fuel through loaves of bread.

Keeping alcohol from sailors (or soldiers, airmen, and marines) seems to be a forlorn hope.
 
Filtering fuel alcohol (for camping stoves etc) through bread is(was?) a common trick used by drunkards. No idea if it actually works or if it's just widespread urban legend.

Hard to imagine it would do squat to methanol, but maybe it does have some (small?) effect in filtering out some other denaturation chemicals?

Back when I worked at the physics lab in university, they had pure ethanol for cleaning certain tools. Let's just say they washed their instruments with water, and we had some pretty spicy punch at the office xmas parties.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back