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SHOCK FOR THE WHALES

ELECTRIC KILLER INVENTED.

CURRENT REPLACES HARPOON

CHEAPER AND MORE HUMANE,,

Another whaleship with her fleet of chasers has arrived at Wellington to join the already large number of Norwegian parties already in the Antarctic on the same errand. In the old days it used to be mainly sperm whaling that attracted the men who hunt.whales, but those monsters were so effectively hunted that they were exterminated. To-day the whalers have to go further afield, but by the way the Antarctic eeas are becoming crowded, there seems every likelihood of the modern prey following his sperm brother. It is some years since the exciting business of harpooning whales by hand wao superseded by the harpoon invented by a Norwegian named Sven Foyn. For some years past, however, Mr. Holm-Hansen, a Norwegian engineer, has been at work upon a plan for killing whales by electricity. His scheme has now materialised, and the invention has been fully covered by comprehensive international patents. Low Power Sufficient.. The idea, according to "Norway," a periodical issued by Norwegian exporters, is to install a small electrical engine on each whaling Doat. The engine will be a low-tension one with a capacity of 4to 5 h.p. The generator producing the alternating current will be of the short-circuit proof type. One electrode will be connected up with a specially constructed conductor which will be directly connected wiUi an entirely new type of harpoon. The other electrode will be directly connected with the skin of the vessel. The whale will then be killed in the following way: As goon as the whale has been sighted the electrical engine will be set going, without, however, passing any current through or into the harpoon. The har-poon-gun has been built in such a way that the moment a shot is fired, the current is immediately and automatically connected up with the harpoon, which may then be a distance of about 5 to 10 meters from the mouth of the gun. The current is completely isolated until it reaches the head of the harpoon. If the harpoon passes through a wave or some spray on its way. to the whale, this makes no difference as the generator cannot short-circuit. As soon as the point of the harpoon touches the whale, the current will immediately pass ' through its body, and back through the conducting sea-water to the side of the ship. A circuit will then have been established, and the whale will be rei'/td witli cramp. It lias been scientifically proved that an electric shock of this kind causes cramp; a result of of this among mammals is that the air still in the lungs will be enclosed— almost hermetically enclosed—and keep the whale afloat. This is a very important point. Much Safer. The advantages of this method of killing whales are many. A few will be enumerated hereunder. It will be possible to make a very considerable reduction in the number of whaleboats required in an efficient whaling fleet. This, again, means that with the same number of whaleboats as now employed, operating during the same period of time, it will be possible to employ twice as many floating factories, yielding twice the present catch. It will be possible to make use of lighter' harpoon guns and lighter harpoons, thereby increasing their effective range. It is believed that the new guns may also be placed amidships and higher up '.han at present, thereby still further increasing the range. Under the present system, large quantities of explosives are stored on board. There is, as a consequence, a not insignificant risk of explosion. This danger disappears entirely, and each shot will cost only a fraction of what it costs under the present method of whale-hunting. Another great advantage is that the electrical method is a mucli more humane way oi killing whales than the present one. It will also, as described above, result in great economies and a much more rational operation. It is understood that a large number of whaling companies will equip their fleets with this apparatus preparatory to the next whaling season.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19291031.2.210

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LX, Issue 258, 31 October 1929, Page 29

Word Count
683

SHOCK FOR THE WHALES Auckland Star, Volume LX, Issue 258, 31 October 1929, Page 29

SHOCK FOR THE WHALES Auckland Star, Volume LX, Issue 258, 31 October 1929, Page 29