acetylene lamp - translation to greek
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acetylene lamp - translation to greek

ACETYLENE-BURNING LAMPS
Acetylene lamp; Carbide lighting; Acetylene gas lamp
  • Carbide acetylene gas generator, drip type (Autocar Handbook, Ninth edition)
  • A carbide lamp from 1900s at the Railway Museum in [[Flåm]], Norway
  • An acetylene gas miner's lamp
  • A French manufactured acetylene gas lamp, of circa 1910, mounted on a [[bicycle]]
  • While LED electric lights have mostly replaced carbide lamps, some still prefer the "old-school" approach of using carbide lamps during recreational [[caving]] excursions.
  • Carbide lamp in a coal mine

acetylene lamp         
λύχνος ασετυλίνης
kerosene lamp         
  • "Central-draft" tubular-wick kerosene lamp
  • Dead-flame
  • Cold-blast
  • New Zealand Railways]] lamp on the [[Weka Pass Railway]]
  • Sumburgh Head lighthouse]] until 1976.
  • Hot-blast
TYPE OF LIGHTING DEVICE
Paraffin lamp; Pressure lamp; Kerosine Lamp; Kerosene lantern; Hurricane lamp; Hurricane lantern; Kerosene pressure lamp; Kerosene lamps; Kerosene lighting; Kerosine Lantern; Hurricane Lanterns
λάμπα πετρέλαιου
carbon arc         
  • right
  • mercury]] arc lamp from a [[fluorescence microscope]].
LIGHT CREATED BY ELECTRICAL BREAKDOWN OF GAS
Carbon arc light; Carbon arc lamp; Arc Lamp; Arc lamps; Arclamp; Electric arc lamp; Arc tube; Arc tubes; Carbon arc; Arclights; Carbon-arc light; Electric arc light
βολταικό τόξο

Definition

Davy lamp
¦ noun historical a miner's portable safety lamp with the flame enclosed by wire gauze to reduce the risk of a gas explosion.
Origin
named after the English chemist Sir Humphry Davy (1778-1829), who invented it.

Wikipedia

Carbide lamp

Carbide lamps, or acetylene gas lamps, are simple lamps that produce and burn acetylene (C2H2) which is created by the reaction of calcium carbide (CaC2) with water (H2O).

Acetylene gas lamps were used to illuminate buildings, as lighthouse beacons, and as headlights on motor-cars and bicycles. Portable acetylene gas lamps, worn on the hat or carried by hand, were widely used in mining in the early twentieth century. They are still employed by cavers, hunters, and cataphiles. Small carbide lamps called "carbide candles" or "smokers" are used for blackening rifle sights to reduce glare. They are sometimes referred to as "smokers" because of the sooty flame produced by acetylene.