MINE SAFETY LAMPS |
Handlan-Buck St. Louis |
Ashworth-Hepplewhite-Grey. |
Presentation Baby Wolf |
ASL&MS Co. Deputy Marsaut |
Everhart Davy. |
ASL&MS Co. |
Jas. Queen Davy |
Aluminum Hughes Bros. Davy Lamp |
Everhart Davy |
Everhart Davy |
Arras Carbide Safety Lamp |
C. Koch Carbide Safety Lamp |
Seippel Carbide Safety Lamp |
Wolf Carbide Safety Lamp |
Pieler Lamp |
Jack-Davy Lamp |
Ashworth-Hepplewhite- Grey |
Patterson HCP |
Patterson HCP9 |
Red Glass Signal Lamp |
Unmarked English |
Hughes Bros. |
J. Davis |
Bainbridge |
Unmarked English |
Shielded Davy |
Laidler - Durham |
Wolf Westphalian Davy |
J.H. Naylor - Wigan |
The danger of methane gas (firedamp) being ignited by an open flame in coal mines was much reduced by the development of the flame safety lamp stemming from the work of Dr. William Clanny, George Stephenson and Sir Humphrey Davy. It is Davy who is credited with the true invention of the flame safety lamp in 1816. His idea was to isolate the flame from the flammable gas by means of a wire gauze surrounding the flame. Davy demonstrated that burning gases, on passing through the wire mesh is broken up into tiny streamlets which are so cooled by contact with the metal of the mesh that the flame is extinguished. It was found that the greatest safety could be obtained by a standard mesh formed by 28 steel wires per inch making 784 openings per square inch. |
Sheffield Baby Wolf |
Aluminum Baby Wolf |
Vest Pocket Davy |
Hughes Bros. Vest Pocket Davy |
Baby E. Thomas & Williams |
Laidler - Durham |
Laidler Stamping |
Premier Lamp Co. Leeds England |
Seippel - Germany |
Best's Gauzeless Lamp Co. - Leeds |
Unmarked - Germany |
Unmarked - Germany |
J.H. Naylor |
Henry Watson New Castle on Tyne |
John Cook Birmingham, England |
Unmarked England |
Wolf Design - Japan |
Arras Chesnau - France |
Hailwoods Patent Lamp Type A.D.C. No.3 Hailwood & Akroyd Ltd. |
John Davis & Son Derby, England |
Name Plaque on Lamp Above Left |
F. Santini Carbide Safety Lamp - Italy |
Laidler - Durham England |
Sento - Japan |