Bulletin 227 Flame Safety Lamps

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 252
- File Size:
- 22580 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1924
Abstract
Flame safety lamps have been used in gaseous mines since the
Davy lamp was introduced, more than 100 years ago. During
the last decade the flame safety lamp has been rapidly replaced
by the electric lamp as a device for illuminating the miner's
working place; in the United States the electric cap lamp has been
widely adopted. For example, in 1911 approximately 45,000 flame
lamps and no electric lamps were being used in the Pennsylvania
bituminous mines, which were then producing 35 per cent of all the
soft coal mined in this country; by 1918 the flame lamps had decreased
to 17,000, whereas electric lamps-mostly of one maketotaled
nearly 48,000. In Great Britain during the same years the
total of 723,934 flame lamps decreased to 590,185 and the electric
lamps gained rapidly from 4,298 to 156,521. No later reliable
figures are at hand. However, before the flame lamp becomes
obsolete, it is fitting that the Bureau of Mines compile a permanent
record of a device which has served the mining industry for more
than three generations, and not only made possible the development
of entire districts that otherwise could not have been worked
but undoubtedly saved the lives of thousands of underground workers.
Flame safety lamps are capable of doing more than the name
indicates. First, under normal conditions, they can be used in a
mine atmosphere that contains an explosive mixture of gas and air
without great danger of exploding such a mixture, though such use
of a flame lamp should not be permitted. Second, to an experienced
man they indicate percentages of gas much lower than the explosive
limit, and thus can be used to indicate to workers the approach of
an unsafe condition in the mine atmosphere. Third, flame lamps
will not burn in an atmosphere greatly deficient in oxygen, and they
therefore warn the users of such deficiency in time to withdraw
to a place of safety.
Flame safety lamps are still used rather widely in the United States
for general illumination and to a still greater extent for detecting
gas. Many coal-producing States require fire bosses to use these lamps
in gaseous mines, and the regulations of several States specify that a gIven number of such lamps be kept available for emergency
service.
Citation
APA:
(1924) Bulletin 227 Flame Safety LampsMLA: Bulletin 227 Flame Safety Lamps. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1924.