Moderatørlampe
En moderatørlampe (efter fr. lampe à modérateur) er en (olie) lampetype med en konstruktionsvariant på basis af Carcellampen patenteret af pariseren Jean-Baptiste Franchot i 1824[1], hvori olietilførelsen modereres. Den mekaniske pumpe erstattedes med et stempel, som via et fjerder satte væskebeholderen under tryk. Desuden indførte han en nåleventil til at regulere tilførslen af den brændbare væske.
Herhjemme anvendte man i fyr moderatørlamper med op til 6 væger, hvoraf den yderste havde en diameter på 120 mm. Gennem næste et helt århundrede var lamper af moderatørtypen de foretrukne til fyrbelysning. Afløseren kom med glødenetsbrænderen.[2]
Eksempler
- Det sidste fyr med moderatørlampe var Hirsholm Fyr.[2]
- Den oprindelige Heiberglampe er et eksempel på en bordlampe af moderatørtypen.
Fodnoter
- ^ "http://www.geopedia.fr/lampes-huile-2.htm". Arkiveret fra originalen 3. oktober 2010. Hentet 13. september 2010.
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Section of Moderator Lamp. The moderator lamp (fig. 3), invented by Franchot about 1836, from the simplicity and efficiency of its arrangements rapidly superseded almost all other forms of mechanical lamp for use with animal and vegetable oils. The two essential features of the moderator lamp are
(1) the strong spiral spring which, acting on a piston within the cylindrical reservoir of the lamp, serves to propel the oil to the burner, and
(2) the ascending tube C through which the oil passes upwards to the burner. The latter consist of two sections, the lower fixed to and passing through the piston A into the oil reservoir, and the upper attached to the burner. The lower or piston section moves within the upper, which forms a sheath enclosing nearly its whole length when the spring is fully wound up. Down the centre of the upper tube passes a wire, “the moderator,” G, and it is by this wire that the supply of oil to the burner is regulated.
The spring exerts its greatest force on the oil in the reservoir when it is fully wound up, and in proportion as it expands and descends its power decreases. But when the apparatus is wound up the wire passing down the upper tube extends throughout the whole length of the lower and narrower piston tube, obstructing to a certain extent the free flow of the oil. In proportion as the spring uncoils, the length of the wire within the lower tube is decreased; the upward flow of oil is facilitated in the same ratio as the force urging it upwards is weakened. In all mechanical lamps the flow is in excess of the consuming capacity of the burner, and in the moderator the surplus oil, flowing over the wick, falls back into the reservoir above the piston, whence along with new supply oil it descends into the lower side by means of leather valves a, a. B represents the rack which, with the pinion D, winds up the spiral spring hard against E when the lamp is prepared for use. The moderator wire is seen separately in GG; and FGC illustrates the arrangement of the sheathing tubes, in the upper section of which the moderator is fixed.